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i responded to a code once on the tele floor that freaked me out. the pt(an LOL) had gone into cardiac arrest with an ICD, and it took a few minutes for it to fire, so we started compressions, and all of a sudden she jerked up like a jack in the box and gasped for air when the it fired, blinked a few times and said "what in the .... are all you people doing in here? is it time to eat?"
it was a very, very, very weird thing to witness.
Gotta love that Edison Medicine! Had a patient in ICU at a small community hospital with a slow VT, poor bugger, he was awake and alert through 3 shocks before anyone could find the magnet...and the cardiologist didn't return the page for another hour. Facility politics didn't allow for other docs to intervene...Holy crap. Still having nightmares about that one. Oh...he did stay in the bed, but I swear he hit the ceiling at least once!
had a code blue one night on a pt. that had an ICD, cardiac arrest...my god when that thing fired, the pt. few into the air like the exorcist! The EPS MD and I screamed where's the magnet, no magnet in sight, EPS MD whipped one out of his pocket. OK, like most MD's walk around with a magnet in their pocket, but I guess when you are an EPS MD you have to. I ALWAYS make sure there is a magnet or 3 on the code cart now,which should have been there in the first place on a Interventional Cardiology floor, but was probably taken off and used to post some nursing inservice bulliten on the fridge in the staff lounge. I don't want to see the pt. become airbourne during a code as the ICD fires, and have the EPS MD say every curse word in the book while looking for the magnet, which is SUSPOSED to be on the code cart.
love for nursing
38 Posts
I am a senior student nurse. This week in clinical, one of my patients had an ICD for about three years, he was in the hospital for pneumonia. The patient was laying in bed asleep with the side rails up. All of a sudden his ICD went off and patient was found laying on the floor with the side rails still up. I found this odd, has anyone every had this happen to a patient?
Outcome: Thanks to the patient being on telemetry. A code was called and patient survived and was transferred to the CCU.