Updated May 22, 2018
Haven’t read the initial case presentation? Read: Clinical Scenario: Emergency at the amusement park
While staffing the first aid station at a local amusement park, you hear your partner speaking to someone in the lobby of the building. A woman’s voice sounds concerned as she talks about her daughter.
SCENE OBSERVATIONS
Walking out from the clinic area, you see a teenage girl seated in a wheelchair. Her eyes are closed and she is slumped over. Her mother and father are with her, and her father has to hold her up to keep her from falling out of the chair.
As you walk up, you notice that the patient’s shirt is soaked through with sweat and she is making snoring sounds with a respiratory rate of eight per minute. Her skin is pink but clammy to the touch. She has a strong, rapid radial pulse.
You wheel the patient into the clinic and your partner helps lift her to the bed. You partner walks over to obtain a history from the patient’s parents as you start your assessment. There are no obvious signs of trauma. Her pupils are midrange and reactive. Her initial blood pressure is 96/40, with a pulse rate of 100.
Discussion
The first concern for any unresponsive patient is maintenance of a patent airway and adequate ventilations. After assuring an adequate airway, the focus turns to differential diagnosis. For an unresponsive patient, the commonly used mnemonic is AEIOUTIPS, which stands for:
Alcohol
Epilepsy
Insulin (diabetes)
Overdose
Uremia
Trauma
Infection
Psychosis
Stroke/Shock
Many of these causes of altered level of consciousness can be ruled in or out based on history or physical exam findings. One item to look for on a patient with an altered level of consciousness is a medical alert tag. There are several manufacturers of these tags, and they may be worn as necklaces, dog tags or bracelets.
The patient discussed earlier does not have any evidence of trauma, stroke, alcohol ingestion or overdose. The two logical remaining causes are seizure (epilepsy) or diabetes. Based on the reports from the patient’s parents, it is unlikely that she had a seizure. Finding a medical alert bracelet that indicates a diabetic history helps guide both your assessment and treatment.
Hypoglycemic episode considerations
Diabetes is disease resulting in increased levels of glucose (a simple sugar and fuel for the body) circulating in the blood. This high blood glucose is caused by problems in the way the body produces or reacts to the hormone insulin. Insulin is produced in the pancreas and causes the cells of the body to intake glucose from the bloodstream. A normal measurement for blood glucose concentration is 80-120 mg/dL. There are two kinds of diabetes seen in most patients: Type 1 and Type 2.
Type 1 diabetes is also known as “juvenile onset” or “insulin dependent” diabetes. In patients with Type 1 diabetes, the body begins to destroy the cells in the pancreas which produce insulin. Because of this lack of insulin (which facilitates the transport of glucose into the cells), the level of glucose in the blood rises. Patients with Type 1 diabetes must take insulin regularly to ensure that their blood glucose stays controlled. This insulin may be taken by subcutaneous injection (often in the abdomen) or via an external pump. Finding an unresponsive patient with an insulin pump or with multiple bruises on the abdomen of varying ages should raise the index of suspicion for a diabetic emergency.
Type 2 diabetes is also known as “adult onset” or “non-insulin dependent” diabetes. This form of diabetes results from increasing insulin resistance in the body. Insulin resistance is characterized by cells in the body losing their ability to respond to insulin. In order to control the level of blood glucose, the pancreas must produce more insulin. This causes the cells to be further desensitized to insulin meaning more must be produced. Eventually, this cycle results in the pancreas being unable to produce enough insulin to maintain normal levels of glucose in the blood. Obesity is often a predisposing factor for Type 2 diabetes.
Patients with diabetes can suffer from medical emergencies resulting from either critically high or critically low blood glucose.
Hyperglycemia (high blood glucose) develops over an extended period of time and may be caused by non-compliance with medications or changes in the body’s metabolism. Periods of sickness or stress can change the way the body responds to insulin and may cause hyperglycemic episodes. Patients with hyperglycemia often present with increased frequency of urination, excessive thirst and excessive hunger. Hyperglycemia may result in the body producing ketones which may be detected as a “fruity” smell on the patient’s breath, but the presence of ketones can only be reliably determined with laboratory testing. These patients should be transported to an Emergency Department as they will often need intravenous insulin rather than simply more insulin by their standard route.
Hypoglycemia (low blood glucose) may develop very quickly and is caused by either excess insulin or inadequate food intake. Often, periods of hypoglycemia are caused by patients taking their insulin as prescribed and then neglecting to eat. Patients may present as clammy or diaphoretic. These patients may be given high sugar foods or drinks orally if they are able to do so themselves. If the patient has a decreased level of consciousness, it is important not to give anything by mouth. In this case the patient either needs intravenous sugar (dextrose) or an injection of glucagon. It is important to realize that some forms of insulin release over an extended period of time, and that once a hypoglycemic patient is initially treated, it may be necessary to have her take food orally to ensure that the blood glucose remains adequate.
Hypoglycemic episode Treatment
After moving the patient to the bed in the clinic, you position her airway with a head tilt and chin lift, and the snoring sound stops. Based on the medical alert medallion you found and the history from the patient’s parents, you suspect a hypoglycemic episode. The patient’s mother measures blood glucose and the result is 25 mg/dL. The patient’s father has a glucagon kit, which they use, and the patient gradually wakes up. A second blood glucose is 45 mg/dL. You give the patient two tubes of oral glucose, by which time your transporting unit has arrived.
The patient states that she took her insulin as prescribed this morning but “didn’t feel much like eating.” The ALS ambulance moves the patient to the stretcher and transports her to the local pediatric ED for further evaluation.