Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 8 | Page 12

MEDICINE AND THE UNEXPECTED (THE SHOCK FACTOR) Dave Dageforde, MD “L et’s go…we’re losing his pulse.” “NoNo…v-fib.” “Initiate CPR…give me an endotracheal tube…I can’t see the cords; push down on the neck. There, I got it.” “Let’s go…Let’s go…c’mon people; grab the sheet…1-2-3 move… (he’s on the cart)… GOOOOOO! My words resonated throughout the catheterization laboratory while the patient was flung onto the transport stretcher. I jumped on top of the patient’s stretcher and continued CPR while my colleague bagged the patient on the way to the operating room (OR). Four cath lab staff shoved the stretcher down the hall towards the elevator as fast as they could proceed. The early days of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) were unlike anything I would have imagined during my cardiology fellowship. The first angioplasty was performed in Switzerland in 1977 while I was still in fellowship training. Within two 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE years after I joined our cardiology practice, Dr. R.A. and I underwent “formal” PTCA training, which was literally, “see one, get help with one, do one.” Dr. R.A. and I observed one case in Indianapolis, the cardiologist from Indianapolis came to Louisville and performed one case with us, and then we were on our own. I continued CPR while we crammed ourselves into the elevator. As the elevator doors opened to the second floor, the staff pushed the stretcher down the narrow hallway, opened the doors to the OR and lifted the patient onto the OR table. “Clear out,” Dr. G, the cardiovascular surgeon, spoke authoritatively; and the cath lab team quickly left the room. I stayed and continued performing CPR standing on a stool beside the patient who was lying on the OR table. The surgeon told me to continue CPR while he literally threw a small bucket of iodine onto the chest and the surgical team scrubbed the patient’s chest. “Dr. D, move your hands, just for a second,” the open-heart surgeon barked as I continued CPR while he made the incision. The sternum was sawn in two and the pericardium exposed. With one quick move,