Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 12 | Page 38

FROM THE BLOGOSPHERE BETTER TO BE LUCKY THAN GOOD Eric Yazel, MD B usy shift, so of course I get called to a code in the ICU. I walk into the room, 30ish y.o. IVDA hx, admitted for sepsis, septic emboli, and ARDS. Stable vital signs 10 minutes previously, now in PEA (Pulseless Electrical Activity) arrest. Already tubed and had a triple lumen. Not a whole lot for me to add for immediate stabilization since the patient had a secure airway and access. Already had epi x1. Accucheck was 149 (never, never forget this in a code). So I immediately get to go to the second phase and start thinking reversible causes. With that history, all sorts of interesting diagnoses on the playing field. The one major thing I noticed was the patient was extremely cyanotic from the upper chest on up. CBC, lytes, cardiac enzymes from a few hours ago essentially unremarkable aside from a white count of 26. Coags normal. Actually starting to kick around the idea of empiric thrombolysis. All of a sudden, quick run of v-fib, zap him with 200 and voila! We have a pulse. I order a new rainbow of labs, cxr, call his pulmonologist to recite my efforts, and start to leave. I sit down, take a deep breath, and head to see another patient. And BOOM! Code alarm goes off once again. Head back into the room, next verse same as the first. PEA, CPR in progress. No labs back. I have them pull up the CXR. I swear I listened to him during the first code. Bilateral breath sounds (crappy, but there). I listen again, knowing there is a big pneumo, still can hear breath sounds. Obvious tracheal deviation on the CXR, also not overly apparent on physical exam. Regardless, time to get moving. So I ask for an angiocath and a chest tube set up - deer in headlights, no one moves. Someone finally scurries off to find a pleurovac and tube. 36 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE Still waiting for an angiocath, they hand me something that looks like something I’d LP a 10 day old with, not gonna cut it. Finally they walk in with this kit that looked like they pulled off a dusty shelf. Has what looks like an 8 inch spinal needle with a pigtail catheter already attached to it. That’s it. Nothing else in the kit besides an adaptor to attach to the pleuravac. Don’t have a lot of time to search for anything else so I went with it. Was actually really smooth- put the needle into the chest cavity, pulled out the inner cannula, heard the hiss and fed the pigtail. That’s it, working chest tube in place in about the same time it would take to do a needle decompression. Aha - immediate return of pulse and stable blood pressure. If I hadn’t ordered or remembered to check th