Intravenous antibioticsYou decide to start antibiotics in case the cause of Charlie’s problems are infection. You prescribe ceftriaxone. You also decide to put Charlie ‘nil by mouth’, and ask the nurses to site a naso-gastric tube. You explain the plan to the nursing staff and to the mother and promise you will be back to review Charlie regularly. Charlie’s mother is pleased that this problem is being taken seriously but wants to take her home as soon as she is better. Charlie is admitted to the ward and intravenous 0.9% NaCl with 5% glucose is started. A naso-gastric tube is inserted and large amounts of green fluid is aspirated. During the day, Charlie appears to develop intermittent spasms of pain that last for 5-10 minutes before abating. At one stage the nurses ask you if they need to call the arrest team again because she has become so pale and lifeless, but she has a good pulse and when you see her she has recovered. You prescribe some intravenous paracetamol. In the evening you review her. The nurses say that she has passed a blood, mucousy stool. Charlie is now less alert than before and not interested in her surroundings. She is pale with a capillary refill time of 3-4 seconds. HR is 185/min, RR 45/min. A second set of bloods was sent by a colleague and the results are now back: Hb 89 g/L Urea 8.2 mmol/L What would you like to do next? |
Map: TAME case 3 - Charlie (Tutorial 1) (322)
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Review your pathway |