Originally posted by davbrucas
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Awkward conversation last night
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Originally posted by DOHCTR View PostI got a healthy dose of the stuff when I had my heart attack. I went from being terrified and in horrible pain to not giving a fuck and finding a rerun of Cheers to be the greatest achievement in American Television.
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Originally posted by davbrucas View PostThat's one of the most difficult things to deal with in medicine. Have to watch a patient go through the stages of death and dying and not be able to do anything due to the patient and/or family's wishes. I respect their decisions, but it's still difficult to watch.
As far as internal bleeding and not doing anything about it...I would have to hear the circumstances to understand that decision. But some patients will not survive surgery so why put them through the painful process? If a patient has the triad of death (acidosis, coagulopathy and hypothermia) then surgery will kill them 100% of the time. I'm not sure of this patient's situation, but there has to be a reason to not intervene with an actively bleeding patient. DNR does not mean Do Not Treat...it just means that if they go into cardiac arrest, that resuscitation efforts are not instituted. But until that point, most anything is fair game.
My grandmother was 94 and came down with sepsis. Long story short, they found out that she had had a heart attack within the past year or so and said that, because of the damage done by the heart attack, she wouldn't live through surgery. It absolutely tore me in half to say goodbye to her. Prior to the sepsis, she only had mild Parkinson's and mild Alzheimer's. she still walked 2 miles a day.Originally posted by PGreenCobraI can't get over the fact that you get to go live the rest of your life, knowing that someone made a Halloween costume out of you. LMAO!!Originally posted by Trip McNeelyOriginally posted by dsrtuckteezydont downshift!!
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Originally posted by davbrucas View PostLoL...most of my patients laugh at morphine. They want demerol.Originally posted by Theodore RooseveltIt is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming...
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Originally posted by ram57ta View PostWow...I wasn't aware that you had one. How old are you again Alex? You seem awful young to be having a heart attack. Mind if I ask whats the story?
Had the telltale enzymes in my blood, an EKG that looked like a lie detector test on Obama, and a ton of docs and nurses swarming me. Was in the ICU for 3 days and the hospital for a week. Carried nitro pills for years after that but I recently had a stress test and a cardiac cath and they said I am good and there is no permanent cardiac scarring. Just goes to show you that it can happen to anyone.Originally posted by lincolnboyAfter watching Games of Thrones, makes me glad i was not born in those years.
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Originally posted by DOHCTR View PostI am 24 now, but I was 19 then. The doctors said it was due to a lack of sleep, excessive energy drinks, and the stress of finals. I had just got back from a weekend of camping after school ended and woke up at my parent's house with an intense chest pain. Worst pain I have ever had in my life next to gasoline in my ear.
Had the telltale enzymes in my blood, an EKG that looked like a lie detector test on Obama, and a ton of docs and nurses swarming me. Was in the ICU for 3 days and the hospital for a week. Carried nitro pills for years after that but I recently had a stress test and a cardiac cath and they said I am good and there is no permanent cardiac scarring. Just goes to show you that it can happen to anyone.
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Originally posted by davbrucas View PostI've had an Asian woman come in with this...she looked like something from the Exorcist rolling down the hall to the resusc bay. She had dark blood shooting from her mouth about 2ft (sitting up on gurney). When we laid her down to get control of her airway, the blood was filling her mouth so fast that two suction setups couldnt keep up with it...I got lucky and go the tube in blindly. We then put in a Sengstaken-Blakemore tube to stop the bleeding...but I think she still died in the OR.
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Originally posted by mstng86 View Postso you don't know what the outcome of a patient is once they leave the ER?
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