Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

24 Critical Care Emergencies


Unconscious Patient


The aim is to resuscitate the patient and treat urgent precipitating conditions
while a picture of the situation is built up. The definitive diagnosis may not be
made in the ED.

MANAGEMENT
1 Manage the patient in a monitored resuscitation area, and call the senior ED
doctor immediately.
(i) Clear obstructing material using a tongue depressor or
laryngoscope blade if the patient is unconscious with a noisy
airway, and remove broken dentures, vomit or blood with a
Yankauer sucker.
(ii) Improve airway opening using a head tilt, chin lift and or jaw
thrust
(a) open the airway with the jaw thrust alone in trauma cases,
avoiding any movement of the neck.
(iii) Insert an oropharyngeal airway and give high-dose oxygen via a
face mask. Attach a cardiac monitor and pulse oximeter to the
patient and aim for an oxygen saturation above 94%.
2 Commence cardiopulmonar y resuscitation if no pulse is felt (see p. 2).
3 A n a ir way-sk i l led doctor shou ld now inser t a n endot rachea l tube if t here is a
reduced or absent gag ref lex and an unprotected airway, using a rapid
sequence induction technique (see p. 467).

4 Otherwise:
(i) Apply a semi-rigid collar if there is any suggestion of face, head
or neck trauma, before moving the patient.

Tip: beware patients who are neutropenic from chemotherapy,
malnourished, elderly, diabetic, have HIV or are otherwise
immunosuppressed, as they have few signs of sepsis. Fever may be
minimal, focal features few, and only a non-specific inflammatory
response is found in the laboratory tests. Immediate blood cultures and
empirical antibiotics are essential.


UNCONSCIOUS PATIENT


Warning: never attempt rapid sequence induction (RSI) unless you have
been trained. Use a bag-valve mask technique instead, while waiting for
help.

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