VOD

VOD stands for Vitals of the Day, and it is practice of less-than-scrupulous ambulance companies in which they don't bother taking the patient's vital signs, rather they just enter the mutually-agreed upon VOD on the patient trip report. This practice is especially prevalent on ambulances transferring elderly patients from nursing homes for seemingly non-emergent problems.

In one such instance, an ambulance company (whose name will be omitted to protect the guilty), transferred an elderly man from the nursing home across the street. He had fallen out of his wheelchair, and the patient really had no complaints… the nursing staff just wanted him "checked out." Upon arrival, the patient seemed stable, and the ambulance's report noted a blood pressure of 132/74 and a pulse of 84. (Both within normal limits.) However, it is policy of the ED where I work to get baseline vital signs on all patients when they come in. When I attached the pulse-ox probe to the patients finger (measures pulse and oxygen level in the blood), I was astounded to see the pulse barely get up to 30. (80 is normal, anything under 60 considered too slow.) A quickly obtained electrocardiogram revealed the following:


EKG4
Click for larger view

What is this EKG rhythm? What are the rate(s)? Interventions? Click on "More" below to see the answer.


The patient was in third degree (complete) AV block, and this is the absence of conduction of atrial impulses to the ventricles. The site of block may be the AV node (as occurs in congenital heart block), or within the His-Purkinje system (typical for acquired heart block). In complete heart block, the atrial rate typically exceeds the ventricular rate, with no fixed relation between atrial and ventricular activity (AV dissociation), and the ventricular rate usually is regular, owing to the regularity of the escape rhythm focus. This patient had an atrial rate of 70 bpm and a ventricular rate of 30 bpm. Response to pharmacologic therapy is poor and often temporary. Persistent symptoms, transient episodes with an under-lying etiology likely to recur, or the failure to identify a reversible cause, necessitates pacemaker therapy. In this patient, we "floated a pacer" in the ER. (Passed a conducting wire into the heart, and then pulsed electrical current through it, in an attempt to make the patient's heart beat faster.)

Moral of the story: Do your job and take the patient's vitals…


Email Email to Friend PrintPrint

Alana Says:

I agree. It really irritates me when I have to insist on doing a complete med assessment. Shouldn’t we as crew members be working towards a common goal? Sometimes it’s the one thing you decided not to check that could have clued you in (like lung sounds).

 

If this is your first visit to the site, please see here for commenting rules.

Comment moderation is selectively enabled. If your comment does not appear immediately, it has been held for moderation. Please be patient, and do not resubmit your comment - I will enable your comment as soon as I get a chance to review it. Thanks!

If you are a registered user on this site, please log in before posting your comment. Not only will you bypass the impersonation and comment spam detection mechanisms, you will also have 60 minutes to edit your comment for glaring spelling or factual errors, whereas those not logged in will have to live with whatever is in the box when they hit the submit button.

:mrgreen: :neutral: :twisted: :arrow: :shock: :smile: :???: :cool: :evil: :grin: :idea: :oops: :razz: :roll: :wink: :cry: :eek: :lol: :mad: :sad: :!: :?:

© 2004-2006
Use of this site implies your understanding and tacit agreement to all points in the disclaimer.
Subaqua Sternal Rubs is proudly powered by WordPress 2.0.5 and Gallery2. This page made freshly for you in 0.870 seconds.
Notice to spammers: Spam Karma 2 has automatically deleted 25185 spams that Bad Behavior didn't get. Don't even bother trying.