Thursday, July 09, 2009

strong work: night float, part 2

so, i don't anticipate describing every patient i ever see in residency on the blog, but i did want to talk briefly about my second night as night float, when i served as the admitting intern.

i admitted one patient overnight on my first night float night, which was a good way to start - it was also slow, so i definitely would've done more if there were more patients admitted to medicine. at the outset, it seemed to be a pretty straightfoward case - young woman, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain for a couple days, CT scan showed signs concerning for pancreatitis. the basic treatment for pancreatitis is really straightforward - nothing by mouth, lots of IV fluids, pain control. great way to start out, learn basic ordering in the computer system.

i went to talk to the patient and her boyfriend and learned about what had been going on - it seemed like the pain had been going on a lot longer, and i got some other information, but the working diagnosis was still pancreatitis. she seemed really anxious, didn't have insurance, and didn't really want to stay. i tried to 'talk her down', let her know what the plan was, and told her i would check in as the night went on. looking at her bloodwork over time; however, i noticed that her blood count was dropping. this could be due to a dilutional effect, where the IV fluids you get 'dilutes' your blood count so it appears that there are less red blood cells than there really are. her blood count kept dropping over time though, so i told the resident i was concerned that there might be more going on even though the patient "looked" great. he agreed that the blood count was low, and it was still low even after we repeated the blood draw, so we decided to get another CT scan, just in case she was bleeding.

as predicted, when i called the radiology resident to ask if she could read the CT, she questioned why we would order another CT eight hours after the patient had just gotten one. i told her that the blood count had dropped considerably and we were concerned about bleeding. she said she didn't see anything, and then i was like, ok, well, better safe than sorry.

as i was getting ready to catch a few winks of sleep, the radiology resident called me back and said on further review, there was hemorrhage in the cul-de-sac, but she couldn't identify the source of the bleeding. i called the general surgery team to evaluate her right away and they said they would see her. after a couple hours, i called them back to see if they had any recommendations and they determined that the likely source of the bleed was a ruptured ovarian cyst. i felt happy because this was on my differential (a list of possible diagnoses you think of at the outset), and then called gynecology to come take a look at the patient before handing her off to the day team who would assume her primary care.

there was more to the story than just this, like keeping the patient informed about developments, trying to enforce rules about family (or boyfriends) staying in the room overnight but letting the patient know that i was still on her side, and making sure everyone was on the same page. when i left in the morning, i was proud that i'd been part of "catching" something that could have been easily overlooked, and also happy that the resident i'd worked with had given me one of the best compliments that a doctor-in-training can get - "strong work!"



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

youre the new House!