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explore lapRating: (votes: 0) It could also be that the NGT was on suction and caused an electolyte imbalance (for instance, K+)...this could certainly cause an arrest. Comment:
Did the pt. aspirate? This could lead to cardiac arrest. Coffee ground emesis is old blood. This would not cause him to die.....
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Coffee grounds emesis IS blood period! Old or not! It may not be old blood depending on where the bleeding is coming from. How are we supposed to know what killed the person with such little info? Sounds like we are missing vital info like bp, hct, ugh, and so forth. Sounds like he died from bleeding internally, with that vague description. I am very concerned that this patient went what sounds like 2 days of profound symptoms without any interventions and then just up and died! With these symptoms someone should have done something.
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Quote from psu_213It could also be that the NGT was on suction and caused an electolyte imbalance (for instance, K+)...this could certainly cause an arrest.
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Sounds like something ruptured and he died.
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Quote from rkitty198Coffee grounds emesis IS blood period! Old or not! It may not be old blood depending on where the bleeding is coming from. How are we supposed to know what killed the person with such little info? Sounds like we are missing vital info like bp, hct, ugh, and so forth. Sounds like he died from bleeding internally, with that vague description. I am very concerned that this patient went what sounds like 2 days of profound symptoms without any interventions and then just up and died! With these symptoms someone should have done something.
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yes, his hgb hct values were normal post op day 1. his dx includes colon injury. he had 3 bullets that went through his transverse colon, as what i've seen on his operative report.
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Based on your second post, my guess is that he had free air in the colon which could have necrosed. If his injury was at the splenic flexure and the anastamosis was not repaired adequately, he could have experienced hypoperfusion, which would have led to the shocky symptoms you describe. It is also entirely possible that he threw a clot. This would explain his shocky symptoms as well, as the thrashing around would make me think FIRST of hypoxia. The opiates that he was probably on would mask the true etiology of his hypoxemia if in fact he had thrown a clot.
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Quote from canesdukegirlBased on your second post, my guess is that he had free air in the colon which could have necrosed. If his injury was at the splenic flexure and the anastamosis was not repaired adequately, he could have experienced hypoperfusion, which would have led to the shocky symptoms you describe. It is also entirely possible that he threw a clot. This would explain his shocky symptoms as well, as the thrashing around would make me think FIRST of hypoxia. The opiates that he was probably on would mask the true etiology of his hypoxemia if in fact he had thrown a clot.
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Was he being orally suctioned and you triggered his gag causing him to vomit? Another possibility is that the increased pressure from the vomiting caused something to burst open. Or as someone else could have dislodged a clot.
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Quote from rkitty198I have patients who are on ngt's for days without kcl in thier Ivs and they are able to maintain a balance of k. I wonder if it wasn't an issue with a post-op bleed from a perforation or an overwhelming infection. I work surgical and see these symptoms mostly in people with hemorrhage.
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i referred to the resident on duty but they didn't care to assess him.
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