Commercial in-flight medical emergencies
Revision as of 07:10, 31 August 2013 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Background
- 1 per 604 flights[1]
- 0.3% of cases died
Epidemiology[2]
- syncope or presyncope (37.4%)
- respiratory symptoms (12.1%)
- nausea or vomiting (9.5%)
- Cardiac symptoms (7.7%)
- Seizures (5.8%)
- Abdominal pain (4.1%)
- Infectious disease (2.8%)
- Agitation or psychiatric symptoms (2.4%)
- Allergic reaction (2.2%)
- Possible stroke (2.0%)
- Trauma, not otherwise specified (1.8%)
- Diabetic complication (1.6%)
- Headache (1.0%)
- Arm or leg pain or injury (1.0%)
- Obstetrical or gynecologic symptoms(0.5%)
Ear pain (0.4%)
- Cardiac arrest (0.3%)
- Laceration (0.3%)
Management
General Approach
- Identify yourself and level of medical training
- Ask a flight attendant to obtain the emergency medical kit (EMK) and administer oxygen as needed
- Patient assessment:
- Identify chief complaint and HPI
- Obtain vital signs (pulse and blood pressure)
- If you are unable to assess blood pressure by means of auscultation, assess it by palpating the radial pulse
- Assess mental status and if there are focal neurologic deficits
- If the patient is in cardiac arrest, obtain and apply an automated external defibrillator (AED)
- For patients with a pulse but a suspected cardiac problem, consider using an AED if it has monitoring capabilities
- The airline may require contact with a ground-based consultant before use
- For patients with a pulse but a suspected cardiac problem, consider using an AED if it has monitoring capabilities
- Initiate consultation with the ground-based consultant if not already initiated by the flight crew
- Consider discussing administration of medications or intravenous fluids with ground-based consultant
- Aircraft diversion, ground-based medical assistance, or both should be coordinated with ground-based consultation
- Document the clinical presentation and care rendered
- Provide to medical personnel on arrival at the destination with transfer of care
Management of Syncope or Presyncope
- Confirm breathing and pulse
- Move the patient to an aisle or galley, place the patient in a supine position with legs raised, and provide oxygen
- Check vital signs
- Most patients will be hypotensive immediately after the episode
- If the patient has diabetes, a glucometer from the patient or a fellow passenger may be used for glucose assessment
- A device may also be available in enhanced EMKs
- Most patients will recover spontaneously within minutes. Give oral fluids when possible
- Consider intravenous fluids only if the patient is persistently hypotensive and cannot take oral fluids or has another indication
Management of Chest Pain or Palpitations
- Check vital signs
- Provide oxygen
- If chest pain may be cardiac in origin, administe aspirin
- If systolic blood pressure is more than 100 mm Hg, consider administering sublingual nitroglycerin every 5 minutes
- Check blood pressure after each dose
- If the AED has monitoring capabilities, consider its use to evaluate the cardiac rhythm and evidence of ST-segment
changes in the limb leads
- If symptoms resolve with the above measures, aircraft diversion is not typically required. Ground-based consultation
can assist with diversion decisions
