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Okay, I have a question for you all. Please feel free to reply in any

way you wish....

43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b, with some

nausea. This persons o2sat is

96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is less

than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy smoker, with

possible cocaine use.

Question is this, is there a time frame from when you experiance chest

pain till when you see any c

changes in the EKG?

A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

University Health System

Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

Bexar County Detention Center

-----------------------------------------

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> 43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b, with some

> nausea. This persons o2sat is

> 96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is less

> than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

> 10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy smoker, with

> possible cocaine use.

>

> Question is this, is there a time frame from when you experiance chest

> pain till when you see any c

> changes in the EKG?

>

Did the patient present with any other signs/symptoms? Fever, body

aches, vomiting, diarrhea, etc? Does the pain increase or decrease on

inspiration? Obviously, ruling out the worst possible case scenario

is admirable, however there are that cause chest pain (pleurisy, for

example). On a side note, was the patient treated as a potential

cardiac patient? By that I mean, was there any relief with SL

nitroglycerin (assuming his vital signs were within normal limits).

-Alfonso R. Ochoa

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You may not see any changes until it is way too late.

If you are asking if you can rule out an MI by a clean 12 lead, followed by a

repeated 12 lead that show no ACS changes, the answer is a resounding no, ECG

changes may come too late to stop the damage before it starts.

No hard and fast rule to apply here. CP with a social history such as his needs

a cardiac work up to include 12 leads, labs and films.

Hatfield FF/EMT-P

www.canyonlakefire-ems.org

---------- Original Message ----------------------------------

Reply-To: texasems-l

Date: Wed, 7 Feb 2007 00:12:13 -0600

>Okay, I have a question for you all. Please feel free to reply in any

>way you wish....

>

>43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b, with some

>nausea. This persons o2sat is

>96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is less

>than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

>10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy smoker, with

>possible cocaine use.

>

>Question is this, is there a time frame from when you experiance chest

>pain till when you see any c

>changes in the EKG?

>

> A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

>University Health System

>Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

>Bexar County Detention Center

>

>

>

>

>-----------------------------------------

>

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in answer, vital signs were 158/102, pulse of 70, respiratory rate of

22, only complaint was sudden onset of chest pain with s.o.b.. SL NTG

was given with some relief,

(a debate rages here... One nurse states that since the EKG shows no

issues, the person cannot be having cardiac issues and wanted to send

him on his merry little way saying he was just having some anxiety

issues.) My arguement to the nurse was " stop treating the darn machine

and treat the pt. This is where the arguement has ensued.

A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

University Health System

Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

Bexar County Detention Center

Re: EKG question

> 43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b,

with some

> nausea. This persons o2sat is

> 96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is

less

> than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

> 10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy

smoker, with

> possible cocaine use.

>

> Question is this, is there a time frame from when you

experiance chest

> pain till when you see any c

> changes in the EKG?

>

Did the patient present with any other signs/symptoms? Fever,

body

aches, vomiting, diarrhea, etc? Does the pain increase or

decrease on

inspiration? Obviously, ruling out the worst possible case

scenario

is admirable, however there are that cause chest pain (pleurisy,

for

example). On a side note, was the patient treated as a potential

cardiac patient? By that I mean, was there any relief with SL

nitroglycerin (assuming his vital signs were within normal

limits).

-Alfonso R. Ochoa

-----------------------------------------

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>>a debate rages here... One nurse states that since the EKG shows no

issues, the person cannot be having cardiac issues and wanted to send

him on his merry little way saying he was just having some anxiety

issues.)<<

The 12 lead is only a part of the picture. The nurse was premature in her

judgment.

This is one reason people are admitted for serial EKGs and enzymes when they

have chest pain indicative of ischemia.

--

Grayson, CCEMT-P, etc.

MEDIC Training Solutions

http://www.medictrainingsolutions.com/

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 12:18:25 AM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... writes:

Okay, I have a question for you all. Please feel free to reply in any

way you wish....

43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b, with some

nausea. This persons o2sat is

96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is less

than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy smoker, with

possible cocaine use.

Question is this, is there a time frame from when you experiance chest

pain till when you see any c

changes in the EKG?

What is his pain description? His blood pressure on presentation? Any

diaphoresis? Is there any family history? Any relief with NTG and O2?

With the history given, the chap is an MI waiting to happen (risk factors:

Male, over 40, obese, smoker, possible drug use as a minimum). He gets admitted

to Cardiology, and possibly an urgent cath without waiting for EKG (or

possibly any enzyme bumps).

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 12:47:55 AM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... writes:

in answer, vital signs were 158/102, pulse of 70, respiratory rate of

22, only complaint was sudden onset of chest pain with s.o.b.. SL NTG

was given with some relief,

(a debate rages here... One nurse states that since the EKG shows no

issues, the person cannot be having cardiac issues and wanted to send

him on his merry little way saying he was just having some anxiety

issues.) My arguement to the nurse was " stop treating the darn machine

and treat the pt. This is where the arguement has ensued.

make that SIX risk factors and insist that the nurse take ACLS again....she

obviously slept through the part about 'Risk Factors " and 'silent MIs'.....

ck

S Krin, DO FAAFP

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 8:29:47 AM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... writes:

In the end, the pt started complaining of pressure. The only other

complaint was lower back back. This pt was held up from advanced care

for approx 4hrs. I was informed by this nurse that she was far more

educated and trained than I was, even considering me with my 20+yrs as

an emt and that the EKG was normal the entire time meaning that he was

not in any cardiac distress, and was placed in an non-emergent priority,

and no notification to the on call md for follow up orders. My main goal

here was to see if anyone could state for certain or have any good leads

located in literature on when one would see visible changes to the EKG

once the onset of cp begins. I have yet to find any referances.

Then that case needs to be referred for QI through what ever means

available. There's no way she met JCAHO standards, much less what should be

taught in

ACLS. SEVEN risk factors (now we have typical chest pain as well as elevated

blood pressure, Male, over 40, smoker, obese and suspected drug usage, not

including any occult family history or high lipids) would have me chatting with

the nurse manager for the unit! This is just the sort of patient that ends

up in the 15% 'unsuspected' mortality statistics.

Any doctor who discharged that patient without at least two sets of enzymes

AND an urgent cardiac stress test of some sort or a heart cath would be

sucking wind if any problems developed, therefore the nurse definitely needs

retraining.

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 10:10:20 AM Central Standard Time,

jkaymdc@... writes:

Obese, smoker, etc..probably diabetes of a sort...how many of us have

seen EKGs without changes or even good looking EKGs that were accurate?

What are his cardiac enzymes? I'd trust that more than the EKG,

however, I'd be trusting how the patient looks, what he describes and

my gut feeling more than anything...but that's not scientific, I know.

Jules:

obviously, in the field, even the fancy Triage Rapid Assay kits are in short

supply. In addition, even the first markers often won't rise for several (up

to 6) hours after onset of significant pain.

You are exactly correct in saying that the way the patient looks, plus

significant risk factors, are the most important factors in field and ED triage

of

this kind of patient. I know some programs who will observe and stress test

ALL patients with chest pain with three risk or more factors, despite

initially normal resting EKGs and normal enzyme levels, and some authorities

are

recommending it for patients with only two risk factors.

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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In the end, the pt started complaining of pressure. The only other

complaint was lower back back. This pt was held up from advanced care

for approx 4hrs. I was informed by this nurse that she was far more

educated and trained than I was, even considering me with my 20+yrs as

an emt and that the EKG was normal the entire time meaning that he was

not in any cardiac distress, and was placed in an non-emergent priority,

and no notification to the on call md for follow up orders. My main goal

here was to see if anyone could state for certain or have any good leads

located in literature on when one would see visible changes to the EKG

once the onset of cp begins. I have yet to find any referances.

A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

University Health System

Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

Bexar County Detention Center

Re: EKG question

In a message dated 2/7/2007 12:18:25 AM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... <mailto:kenneth.dempsey%40uhs-sa.com>

writes:

Okay, I have a question for you all. Please feel free to reply

in any

way you wish....

43 y/o male presents with sudden onset of chest pain, s.o.b,

with some

nausea. This persons o2sat is

96% on room air, twelve lead shows Sinus rthym. Onset time is

less

than 15min ago. Pain is a " 9 " on a

10 scale. Pt has no significant hx, is obeise and a heavy

smoker, with

possible cocaine use.

Question is this, is there a time frame from when you experiance

chest

pain till when you see any c

changes in the EKG?

What is his pain description? His blood pressure on

presentation? Any

diaphoresis? Is there any family history? Any relief with NTG

and O2?

With the history given, the chap is an MI waiting to happen

(risk factors:

Male, over 40, obese, smoker, possible drug use as a minimum).

He gets admitted

to Cardiology, and possibly an urgent cath without waiting for

EKG (or

possibly any enzyme bumps).

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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>> (a debate rages here... One nurse states that since the EKG shows no

>>issues, the person cannot be having cardiac issues and wanted to

send

>>him on his merry little way saying he was just having some anxiety

>>issues.) My arguement to the nurse was " stop treating the darn

machine

>>and treat the pt. This is where the arguement has ensued.

Obese, smoker, etc..probably diabetes of a sort...how many of us have

seen EKGs without changes or even good looking EKGs that were accurate?

What are his cardiac enzymes? I'd trust that more than the EKG,

however, I'd be trusting how the patient looks, what he describes and

my gut feeling more than anything...but that's not scientific, I know.

Jules

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 10:10:20 AM Central Standard Time,

_jkaymdc@..._ (mailto:jkaymdc@...) writes:

I'd be trusting how the patient looks, what he describes and my gut feeling

more than anything...but that's not scientific, I know.

Maybe more so than we give credit too?

Read Blink and some of the stuff Deepak Chopra has done on things like

intuition and gut feelings.

Epithelia cells are amazing things.

He's sick period. I'd be working him us as BLS guy holding my Medic to meet

me en-route (if need be) and as I like to say I'd be " swiftly " transporting

him to the closest cardiac cath capable ED in the area (if the distance was

right of course).

Louis N. Molino, Sr., CET

FF/NREMT-B/FSI/EMSI

Freelance Consultant/Trainer/Author/Journalist/Fire Protection Consultant

Buddhist philosopher at-large

LNMolino@...

(Cell Phone)

(Home Phone)

(IFW/TFW/FSS Office)

(IFW/TFW/FSS Fax)

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stated recipient and may contain private and or confidential materials

retransmission is strictly prohibited unless placed in the public domain by the

original author.

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the no ekg changes means no ami is the same as " if they didnt pee themselves or

poop their pants they couldn't have had a seizure " they teach nurses that, also.

please don't flame me.... it's in several nursing texts i own.

jim

paramedic

RN student

jkaymdc@... wrote:

>> (a debate rages here... One nurse states that since the EKG shows no

>>issues, the person cannot be having cardiac issues and wanted to

send

>>him on his merry little way saying he was just having some anxiety

>>issues.) My arguement to the nurse was " stop treating the darn

machine

>>and treat the pt. This is where the arguement has ensued.

Obese, smoker, etc..probably diabetes of a sort...how many of us have

seen EKGs without changes or even good looking EKGs that were accurate?

What are his cardiac enzymes? I'd trust that more than the EKG,

however, I'd be trusting how the patient looks, what he describes and

my gut feeling more than anything...but that's not scientific, I know.

Jules

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In a message dated 2/7/2007 10:38:28 PM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... writes:

well I dont know what his markers were. The pt didnt live long enough

to find that out. But I am still going round and round on this subject.

ok...was there an autopsy performed? the slides of the heart tissue would be

the 'final' diagnosis in this case.

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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well I dont know what his markers were. The pt didnt live long enough

to find that out. But I am still going round and round on this subject.

A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

University Health System

Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

Bexar County Detention Center

Re: Re: EKG question

In a message dated 2/7/2007 10:10:20 AM Central Standard Time,

jkaymdc@... <mailto:jkaymdc%40aim.com> writes:

Obese, smoker, etc..probably diabetes of a sort...how many of us

have

seen EKGs without changes or even good looking EKGs that were

accurate?

What are his cardiac enzymes? I'd trust that more than the EKG,

however, I'd be trusting how the patient looks, what he

describes and

my gut feeling more than anything...but that's not scientific, I

know.

Jules:

obviously, in the field, even the fancy Triage Rapid Assay kits

are in short

supply. In addition, even the first markers often won't rise for

several (up

to 6) hours after onset of significant pain.

You are exactly correct in saying that the way the patient

looks, plus

significant risk factors, are the most important factors in

field and ED triage of

this kind of patient. I know some programs who will observe and

stress test

ALL patients with chest pain with three risk or more factors,

despite

initially normal resting EKGs and normal enzyme levels, and some

authorities are

recommending it for patients with only two risk factors.

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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well Doc, I wish I could give you all that, but I am just the poor low

man on the totem pole. I just know that there was bad judgement on part

of a nurse

in a system that refuses to recognize the input of a medic because as I

was told, my job is not of a profesional standing and I.... and I quote

here...

" need to remember my place " . I did file a complaint with our medical

system and the BNE. As of date, nothing has happened.

A. Dempsey EMT-I/FF

University Health System

Department of Correctional Healthcare Services

Bexar County Detention Center

Re: Re: EKG question

In a message dated 2/7/2007 10:38:28 PM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... <mailto:kenneth.dempsey%40uhs-sa.com>

writes:

well I dont know what his markers were. The pt didnt live long

enough

to find that out. But I am still going round and round on this

subject.

ok...was there an autopsy performed? the slides of the heart

tissue would be

the 'final' diagnosis in this case.

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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In a message dated 2/8/2007 12:52:58 AM Central Standard Time,

kenneth.dempsey@... writes:

well Doc, I wish I could give you all that, but I am just the poor low

man on the totem pole. I just know that there was bad judgement on part

of a nurse

in a system that refuses to recognize the input of a medic because as I

was told, my job is not of a profesional standing and I.... and I quote

here...

" need to remember my place " . I did file a complaint with our medical

system and the BNE. As of date, nothing has happened.

and the nurses complain about bad docs!

ck

S. Krin, DO FAAFP

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