"He Keeps Falling Out" in the Bathroom
Large numbers of patients are on some form of blood thinners, and that number increases daily.
Scene
Attack One responds to a report of a person "passed out in the bathroom." The nice lady who greets you at the door tells you that's where she found her husband unconscious. You follow her to a little bathroom in the back of the two-story house, where the man is sitting on the toilet, confused but conscious and able to respond.
You bring him out and lay him on the open floor in the dining room. He says he's having no pain, and his wife offers that he "keeps falling out." The couple agrees that he has passed out three times today. He has never passed out before. No pain, no diaphoresis, no palpitations. Each episode lasts for about 30-60 seconds, then he spontaneously awakens. There is no trauma associated with these episodes. He has had heart disease, and underwent coronary catheterization and stenting about three years ago. Prior to that he had severe angina. He has had no recurrence of that angina since the procedure. He is on medicine for hypertension, high cholesterol and gout.
Your assessment finds a friendly elderly man who is now alert and oriented, with stable vital signs and cardiac rhythm. His pulse oximetry reading is normal. You load him onto the cot and move him toward the front door. Approaching the door, your fellow crew member notes the man's skin color looks a little pale. He then uses the natural outdoor light to evaluate the man's conjunctiva. They are noticeably pale.
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INITIAL ASSESSMENT
VITAL SIGNS
AMPLE ASSESSMENT |
"Have you been bleeding?" you ask the man. He says he has not.
"Are you on any blood thinners?" No.
"Do you take aspirin?" Yes. No one had mentioned that.
"Where were you when you passed out the other times?" In the bathroom.
"Which one?" Upstairs.
Time to check that bathroom. You have the wife escort you upstairs. The answer is apparent as you enter the bathroom: There's the distinctive smell of a GI bleed. In the toilet is some quantity of dark, tarry stool.
You now start a large bore IV and deliver a bolus of saline. Just after you place the IV line, the patient asks to sit up. He gets lightheaded, and vital signs taken as his head is raised reveal a significant drop in blood pressure and increase in heart rate. Time for him to lie back down.
Hospital
At the ED, the patient is assessed by the emergency physician, who accepts your advice to leave him lying supine. You review your examination with the doctor, noting again the pale conjunctiva. As the wife lists the patient's medications for the ED nurse, she again forgets to mention the aspirin he takes each day. You remind her not to forget that important drug when she talks about his medications.
The ED staff formally attempts a tilt test, and when the patient attempts to stand up, he sinks to the floor. Back to the supine position he goes. The patient has a hemoglobin of 7, and no indication of any heart problems. His later hospital workup finds a small ulcer in his small intestine, likely from his aspirin therapy. He does well on a heart stress test after his blood volume is restored, and his heart rhythm is stable for two days. The conclusion: His syncope was due to acute blood loss from the ulcer, and the ulcer was related to his aspirin therapy. He is switched from aspirin to a prescription medication that has a lower incidence of gastrointestinal irritation and bleeds.
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