Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 5 | Page 19

FEATURE The patient’s eyes are now open, he is confused, I do not see signs of head trauma, though possible intracranial bleeding is anticipated. Primary survey is unremarkable: good breath sounds, strong pulses, pelvis stable, GCS 14 (less for confusion). I complete the FAST exam while the radiology technician steps in to perform a chest and pelvis X-ray. The FAST shows no free fluid and the X-rays are negative for obvious acute pathology. We roll the patient off the backboard, cut off all remaining clothing and complete a secondary survey. The EMS crew, as well as the whole Room 9 team, are astonished by the remarkably intact physical exam. Excepting some dirt scuffs on his clothing, and a self reported headache, there is no evidence of any trauma at all. There is not a single area of palpable tenderness, no lacerations, no ecchymosis—not even an abrasion. Unable to rule out internal injury, and that shock is diverting his nociceptive stimulus, he is rolled from the trauma bay to the CT scanner. In an accident mechanism which usually ends up with a patient immediately taken to the OR in good situations, or, more often, dying in Room 9 —this young male being stable enough for CT was remarkable in itself. Upon returning from CT, the patient was wide awake, headache had resolved, and although he could not remember the accident, he recalled everything leading up to the event. Repeat physical exams revealed the same benign initial presentation. Full CT man-scan revealed no intracranial bleeding, no fractures and no solid organ injuries. Three hours after arrival, he walked out of the ER, back to his family. In mulling over the accident in my head, I can see him falling asleep, waking up at 75 mph, veering off of the road. Upon realizing the situation, he overcorrects the wheel and sends the car into a cataclysmic death roll while he was unrestrained. I imagine he loses consciousness as his head contacts the roof of the car. The rest is a blur and does not make any logical sense. It’s almost as if an angel paused time in that instant, when the car begins to cascade through the air, opens up the wind- shield, and picks him up out of the car, resumes time and when all is over, gently rests him down in the grass on the side of the road. Maybe he never even hit his head and unbeknownst to him, he was protected by something we cannot understand, for a pur- pose that we can never know. I cannot explain the miracle that happened that day. I do know I was fortunate to witness something rare and incredible. I am also grateful I did not have to watch another healthy person die suddenly over a single momentary lapse or wrong turn. And I am happy I did not have to tell a young mother that her son is now dead. I am thankful the bugs are gone. I pray the man with the swollen face follows up and gets what he needs, and I hope he lives a wonderful life and is able to do something great with his second chance. When things are tough, I try to remember these people. In a profession like medicine, we can all learn a lot from their bravery and grace. Dr. Ferguson is a Emergency Medicine PGYIII. OCTOBER 2017 17