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When to use an ABCDE assessment
This protocol should be used for critically ill patients. For example those with very unstable observations or reduced GCS.
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Note on ABCDE assessment
Only move to the next letter when the one before has been treated, and keep re-assessing ABCDE from the start as necessary.
Bloods (mark as urgent) | ABG (if low saturations/low GCS), venous bloods (group and save, FBC, U&Es, CRP, LFTs Β± amylase, clotting, troponin, VBG etc.), capillary glucose, blood cultures (if pyrexial) |
Orifice tests | Urine dip, urine/sputum/faeces culture, urine Ξ²HCG |
X-rays / imaging | Portable CXR, CT brain (if neurology or low GCS in the absence of other causes) |
ECG | Β± 3-lead cardiac monitoring |
Special tests | Depending on likely cause |
A patient presents to ED with chest pain and this trace. What would you do?
Interpretation management
You are reviewing a breathless patient on the acute medical unit waiting to be clerked with known COPD, admitted with breathlessness. You undertake an A-E assessment. His airway is patent. His respiratory rate is 32, and the nurse has put him on 35% oxygen via Venturi mask as he had low oxygen saturations. His chest sounds very wheezy. You perform an arterial blood gas.
What does the ABG show?
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What would you do next?
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The patient has now had all of the treatment you prescribed and you repeat an ABG. This shows ongoing type 2 respiratory failure with acidosis. What would you do now?
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You are in the resuscitation area of the emergency department. A male patient is brought in with a low GCS. The patient’s name, details and medical history are unknown. You immediately undertake a rapid A-E assessment:
A: talking but confused
B: RR 8, Sats 91% on air, chest sounds clear
C: BP 122/80, HR 69, capillary refill <2 seconds, nurses unable to succeed in establishing IV access
D: eyes open in response to pain; pupils pinpoint; withdraws from pain but does not follow commands; confused speech; capillary glucose 5.8
E: unkempt; no rashes or bleeding; needle marks noted in groins
What is the patient’s GCS?
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What is the likely cause of the low GCS? Which medication would you give (include dose)?
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The patient responds and his GCS improves. You also try to insert an IV cannula and have no success. What are the options for IV access?
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IV access is established. A couple of hours later the patient’s GCS drops again. What would you do now?
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You are asked to see a 49 year old female patient on a surgical ward who has been admitted for an elective Whipple’s procedure for pancreatic cancer. The procedure was undertaken 6 days previously. She has had no other medical problems previously. The nurse has asked you to see the patient because of a high NEWS score. Observations are as follows:
HR 145, BP 98/68, RR 22, Sats 90% on air (improved to 95% on 4L nasal oxygen), temperature 38.2, GCS 15
The nurse has already performed an ECG prior to your arrival. There was a previous normal pre-op ECG 8 days ago.
You examine the patient and hear coarse crepitations in the left lower zone posteriorly. Heart sounds are normal but irregular. Mucus membranes look dry. You are unable to see the JVP. There is no peripheral oedema or rashes. The surgical wound is clean.
What initial investigations would you request?
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What is the main finding on the ECG?
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What is your initial management?
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How would you manage the patient’s arrhythmia?
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