Thursday, June 30, 2011

I haven't been trained...

...to read radiological studies.  I'm not a doctor.  I might be able to look at a chest x-ray and tell that something is wrong, but I couldn't tell you what.  CT scans and MRIs are mysteries to me, interpreted and translated into written language that I can then interpret and translate into language that my patients can understand.

But when I watched the images flicker by on the computer screen in the CT scan room... the snapshots of slices of brain tissue... I saw the bleed, and I knew it was bad.  My heart sank.

This 71 year old woman came into one of my rooms by ambulance.  That morning she woke up as she normally did, took her pills, and upon exiting the bathroom said to her family, "I don't feel very good," and suddenly developed right sided paralysis, facial droop, and slurred speech.

As I cared for her, she deteriorated at a rapid rate.  She was bleeding into her brain, and she was bleeding fast.

By the time the family arrived (15 minutes or so behind the ambulance's arrival), we'd already done much of what needs to be done when a patient having a stroke comes into the ER.  EKG, lab studies, CT of the head/brain, IV access, NIH Stroke Scale neurological assessment... things happen really, really fast when we all know that time = brain tissue.  Minutes after their arrival, it became apparent that this woman, who only an hour before had been walking and talking, and only 20 minutes ago could tell me her name, was not going to be able to maintain her own airway safely.  She was vomiting uncontrollably, and I'd rolled her to lie on her side to try to keep her from aspirating her own emesis.

The physician asks the family if they want us to put in an endotracheal tube.  They're crying, holding on to each other, and lost.  "We don't want her to suffer!" they say.  The physician says, "I can't speak to that, but I can tell you that either way, I don't believe this is going to be a good outcome.  She may die.  If we don't put the breathing tube in now, she will almost certainly die from being unable to breathe.  You need to tell us what you want us to do."

I was manually ventilating the patient with an ambu-bag, my gloves covered in vomit and blood from where her IV pulled as we rolled her onto her side.  I watched this family's anguish and grief, their terror and indecision... and had to make the conscious choice to shut down my emotional self entirely.  It was the only way I could continue to do my job.

We intubated her and connected her to a ventilator.  We sedated her with Valium and Propofol.  We bathed her and put a clean gown on her.  We maintained IV fluids and soft wrist restraints and frequent neurological checks.  We put in a gastric tube to empty her stomach so she wouldn't vomit, and a temperature foley catheter to empty her bladder and monitor her core temperature.  We gave her a unit of platelets to try to get her blood to clot to control the bleeding within her skull.  We secured a bed for her in the intensive care unit.  We had stabilized her as best we could. We offered the family water and coffee.

I went through the motions, trying to absorb and learn what I could about the procedures we were performing.  I answered the family's questions as clearly and honestly as I could.  My brain was telling me that this woman was not going to long survive this event, and my heart was trying to tell me something I couldn't deal with right then.

Honeybunch stopped by a little later in my shift to bring me my spare car key (I'd locked the car with the keys inside when I got to work that morning).  We'd just transported the woman to the ICU.  When I hugged him and thanked him, I nearly broke down right there in the waiting room.  Sometimes a kind word, a concerned look, an embrace from someone who cares is like being given permission to cry.

I fought the tears for nearly 11 hours, until I started my drive home. 

I got through my first massive hemorrhagic stroke case.  I'm better prepared for the next time it happens in regards to what needs to be done to try to save a life.  But I don't know if I'll ever be any more prepared for the emotional assault of seeing a family trying to make that kind of decision...in a small room with about a dozen strangers in it, with their mother/wife/grandmother covered in vomit and blood, with a physician nearly shouting at them to decide what to do.

I'm going to write an advanced directive this weekend.  I don't ever want my family to struggle with that choice on my behalf.

Friday, June 24, 2011

You know it's been a bad day when...

...you go to the morgue to retrieve an empty gurney on which to transport your recently deceased patient, and find two other staff members already there, standing beside a gurney covered with a white sheet.  "They're all full," they say to you.  "What do you mean, they're all full?" you inquire.  "We're waiting for the funeral director to pick this guy up," they gesture to the gurney next to them, "so that we can take this gurney upstairs for another one". 

The room smells like death.  It's cold, so it's not as bad as it could be, but it's there... that sort of sweet off-odor of decay.   You really, really don't want to have to come back down here an extra time tonight. Aside from the smell, your trip to here from the ER involved a ride on the terrifying industrial elevator that reminds you of an unnerving Sigourney Weaver scene in "Aliens".  .

You open each of the stainless steel lockers... why are there only 8 of them in a hospital this size?   Each of them holds a gurney, upon which rests body draped by a white sheet.  One of them is very small... a child. Your find that your colleagues are correct... not an empty gurney to be found.  They tell you that this is the fourth death on their unit today.  "That sucks," is all you can think of to say.

And you return to the ER without a gurney.  You and your dead patient will have to wait.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

In the past two days...

..I've cared for patients with the following maladies:

-acute stroke
-NSTEMI
-SVT
-hypoglycemia
-traumatic injuries from a MVC- fractured ankle and open fracture of the knee cap
-child with injuries from MVC
-child with a fractured orbit
-bowel obstruction

...and a whole bunch of other not-so-memorable chest pain, shortness of breath, UTIs, generalized weakness/dizziness, blah blah blah.

I also got my PALS certification.

The pace is FAST, the volume is massive, and I'm having fun.  But boy am I glad that the workweek is over for me.

Friday, June 10, 2011

It's summertime

Everything is incredibly green right now.  The days are hot, and long... it's not fully dark until after 9pm around here.  There is too much to do, and not enough time in which to do it, and my seedlings have died since I didn't get an annual veggie garden bed dug in time.  I'm forgiving myself for that. 

The ducks are getting big and fat, and the chickens are acting like chickens... our little rooster is trying to be a big man out there, puffing up his chest and strutting around like he's something else.  The iris and peonies are giving way to lilies, and everywhere I look there are black walnut seedlings to be pulled out.

After pulling some weeds and digging out many, many sumac and black walnut saplings, we found a lovely little stone retaining wall under all that mess.  We hope to terrace this hillside for next year's veggie garden.






Mulching, ever mulching...


From the strawberry patch!  I know I'm supposed to pluck off all the blooms the first year... but I couldn't help it, by the time I realized they were blooming there was already fruit ripening and I couldn't bring myself to do it.

7 pints of strawberry jam canned so far!

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Beat the heat...


It's definitely summertime around here.  The temperature has been hitting the mid-90s, the lightning bugs are illuminating the nights like it's Christmas, and turtles are burying their eggs in the yard.  I am grateful for my little window A/C unit, and for the cool shade of the woods on our property, and for fresh clean water out of the well that can be made into lemonade.

It's been a little hectic around here with work, and trying to keep up with stuff to be done around the homestead.  I'm choosing to escape into cheap easy fiction, consumed in terrifying quantities on my Kindle.  I've had a headache for 4 days straight now, with body aches, fatigue and nausea... and I'm worried about the possibility of Lyme.  The ticks are HORRIBLE this summer.  They're everywhere.  I haven't found a bite or a rash, but I'm suspicious.  I'll get some labwork done this weekend, even though the lab tests for Lyme are notoriously inaccurate...

This weekend our former Good Neighbors are coming up to visit overnight and I'm just tickled pink.  This entire week (and the next TWO!) are all classroom stuff at work... critical care modules on a computer.... it's all interesting material but one can only sit and read about heart failure, pacemakers and CABG at a computer for so many hours each day.  I'm anxious for the weekend.