Sunday, November 25, 2007

Code Blue

Last week I participated in my first code. First a word on codes in the hospital.

Each night my team is on call, we carry code pagers, which as the name suggests, only go off when someone is coding. A code is called when a patient stops breathing, or either doesn't have a pulse or has a life-threatening arryhthmia. When the code pager goes off, there are a series of distinctive beeps, and then the operator says what kind of code it is, and where in the hospital it is happening. When we are on call overnight, our team is responsible for any code on the wards or in the ICU, which means my senior resident (who is a second year resident) is responsible for running the code. Every one on the team is supposed to have a designated role which ideally has been discussed before the pager goes off. Obviously, code pages are urgent, and when the pagers sounds, everyone goes running.

It was about 4:45 when I was awoken from sleep by the code pager. I took one second to make sure I wasn't hallucinating, and then put on my shoes as fast as I could, grabbed my scrub top, and took off out of the call rooms running toward the ICU. Unfortunately, the medical student call rooms are across the hospital from there, and after a rapid trip up the stairs, I found the ICU (running up stairs in Queen Anne definitely paid off).

It wasn't hard to find the code. The patient's room was overflowing with nurses, respiratory therapists, and numerous other people. I caught the eye of my senior resident right away, and he told me to put gloves on and break the nurse who was doing chest compressions. He told me to do them like her, but faster.

Before this, I had only done chest compressions on mannequins in CPR class. You hear that it is hard, but it doesn't really sink in until you have to do it. As I did compressions, I had no idea what was going on with the patient, nor had I ever seen him before. I focused on what I was doing and kept my ears open for further instructions. It was chaos around me. Hovering over everyone was my senior resident and a cardiology resident, managing the chaos, trying to determine why the patient is coding, and what algorithm they should be following to correct it.

Fortunately, the residents did figure it out, the patient was given some medications (this is another story), and he soon had a pulse again. I no longer had to do compressions, which was good because I was exhausted. From start to finish, the code took about 25 minutes (I did compressions for only a couple minutes) and as far as I know, the patient stabilized and recovered.

It was my first code, and though it ended well, it is a traumatic, even brutal, experience for the patient. It's hard to convey the chaos of the code, with the alarming sounds of the monitors, the resident giving orders, the nurses giving meds, the anesthesiologist having a hard time intubating the patient, the surgery resident seemingly stabbing blindly into the patient's groin with a giant needle, and the patient's unconscious body absorbing chest compressions and these other insults. Fortunately for everyone, this code ended well. It's frightening to think that in a couple years, I'll be a resident in the hospital overnight, responsible for running a code like that one. It's exciting but intimidating to realize how much we're expected to learn in a short time.

Ski season!

There's been some snow in the mountains and some of the highest mountain passes haven't closed yet for the winter, so my friend David and I thought we'd check out the early season conditions. Shin deep powder and a blue bird day. Tough to beat for November.

I've figure out how to add a slide show of pictures, so you can view them here or click on them to be taken to another website.


Monday, November 12, 2007

Life at the VA

These days I'm at the VA hospital in Seattle, having moved on from Harborview (I'm still on my Internal Medicine rotation). It's a totally different patient population, but the vets are friendly, tend to see you as their doctor even though you're a student, and they usually have chronic diseases like emphysema or heart failure. So far I have only had male patients at the VA and they are generally over 65. My team has not had any patients who are returning from Iraq or Afghanistan, and I think this is because there is a large military hospital south of Seattle by Fort Lewis.

In my experience so far, the patients at the VA tend to be a little sicker than at Harborview, but this is probably because they are usually older and because unlike at Harborview, our team at the VA has patients in the ICU.

This week two of the patients on our team died. I was with one of the interns to pronounce the patient dead. This requires making sure that the person's pupils are not reactive to light, and then listening for heart and lungs sounds. Both of the patient's on our service had severe liver disease, and they and their families had agreed that they receive only "comfort care". In addition to being DNR (meaning that if they stop breathing or their heart stops, we will not perform CPR or go to extreme measures to prolong their life), they are taken off all monitoring and are made comfortable assuming by treating any pain that they may be in. These people are usually extremely sick, with nothing that can be done to cure them or restore some quality of life. Making them "comfort care" allows them to die naturally, without the trauma of a code (emergent resusitation), which usually breaks ribs, can puncture lungs, can be tragic for the family to see. Moreover, codes usually either don't revive the patient, or lead to a proctracted period of respiratory support in the ICU, with the family having to decide what to do.

When I was on call almost two weeks ago, I admitted a patient who had renal failure which was caused by urinary retention due to benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH - watch the evening news and you'll see ten commercials for BPH drugs). He also had blood in his urine and was severely anemic. He was stable when he was admitted, and basically all we had to do for him was drain the 3L (that is a massive amount, by the way) of urine out of his bladder with a catheter to relieve the pressure on his kidneys and then watch his renal function hoping that the damage hadn't been permanent. One of the great advantages of being a medical student is that I have lots of time to talk to the patients, and I had gotten to know this gentleman very well. Once I got over the fact that he was originally from Canada, I learned that he had been quite an athlete and outdoorsman, and had done extensive mountaineering and hunting in Alaska. He told me he decided at a young age that he would live for love and adventure and had been successful on both accounts. He had recently been working as a gardener (he is 74), but had experienced gradually worsening fatigue in the past six months or so. As you might infer, I took quite a liking to this gentleman.

That night while I was reading up on renal failure and hematuria, his urine became more and bloody until the bag which his collected it looked like it was filled with blood. He continued to feel fine, but when his labs came back in the morning, he had become dangerously anemic (for you medical types, his Hct dropped from 25 to 15) and needed to be transferred to the ICU. It was a little harrying to discuss the new plan with my senior resident, which now focused on immediate planning should he go into shock. This entailed placing two large-bore IVs, one in each arm, calling the blood bank and writing his orders for ICU transfer. This was my first patient whose condition I watched rapidly deteriorate and it affected me more than I would have anticipated. Meanwhile, the patient himself was nonplussed and without new symptoms. I think he realized that I was more alarmed than he, and was even a little amused by this.

We transfused several units of blood into him, and several days later his urine cleared. His kidney function has improved, but not to normal and now he is waiting to be seen by the urologists to determine the cause of his bleeding.

Experiences like this are one reason I would not want to be an ER physician. It's a special experience to take care of patients throughout their time in the hospital, to see them every morning, ask them how their doing, check their labs every day and modify the plan. Sometimes when you meet them, you can't make a diagnosis, but over the course of hours or days, the pieces start to fall into place. Sometimes the patient gets better, sometimes you can only stabilize them, and sometimes they are found to have a chronic disease (like renal failure) or worse, a terminal diagnosis. No matter what, it's a unique and privileged experience to be with a patient as they go through what is often a life-changing experience.

Thriller

This post is a shout-out to Diana and her crazy ways. On October 27th, about 100 people in Seattle, including Diana and her friend Allison, performed a choreographed dance to the Michael Jackson classic, "Thriller". They joined a couple thousand other people around the world who did the dance at the same time in an attempt to break the world record for most people dancing at the same time. Apparently, 200,000 Canadian children danced the hokey-pokey at the same time a couple years ago, so they didn't break the record. They held practices once a week for two months to learn the over-six minute dance and then they performed at a couple locations in Seattle, including the Seattle YMCA and Westlake center. Oh yeah, and if you're not familiar with Thriller, the dancers are supposed to all be zombies.



Here's a link to a video of the dance at Westlake Center.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=NN-o7a93i0M