Scenario — Sudden onset palpitations and near-syncope at community fair
intermediate Cardiac · Elderly · 75yr · female
Patient Information
| Dispatch | You are called to a 75YO female (Dorothy Hennessey) at the Rockingham Community Fair who is sitting near the craft stalls feeling very unwell, complaining of a racing heart and nearly fainting. |
| Patient | Dorothy Hennessey — 75yr (60kg) |
| Incident History | Pt was browsing craft stalls when she suddenly felt her heart 'go haywire', became dizzy and nearly fell. A bystander helped her to a chair and called the FAP. |
| Emergency Contact | Margaret Hennessey (Daughter) — 0412 774 203 |
Initial Rapid Assessment
| Response | Alert |
| Airway | Patent. Nil airway obstruction. Nil stridor. Self-maintaining. |
| Breathing | Slightly increased rate. No accessory muscle use. No wheeze or crackles audible. Able to speak in short sentences. |
| Circulation | Rapid and irregular weak radial pulse. Skin pale and diaphoretic. No visible haemorrhage. |
| Disability | GCS 14 (E4V4M6). Orientated to person and place, mildly confused about recent events. Complains of dizziness and light-headedness. |
| Exposure | No visible rash, wounds or swelling. Patient is seated. No obvious injury from near-fall. |
Vitals
| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 95% (RA) | Mild | 20 | 148 | 88/60 | 3s | 14 | 3 3 ++ | 36.8 | 6.4 mmol/L | 3 |
| 10 mins | 98% (O2 simple face mask 6L/min) | Nil | 17 | 142 | 100/68 | 2s | 15 | 3 3 ++ | 36.8 | 6.4 mmol/L | 2 |
History Taking
| Signs/Symptoms | Sudden onset rapid irregular heartbeat, dizziness, light-headedness, near-syncope, mild shortness of breath, mild chest discomfort described as a fluttering sensation. |
| Allergies | Penicillin — rash. No known allergy to aspirin or NSAIDs. |
| Medications | Warfarin (for known atrial fibrillation), Metoprolol 25mg daily, Perindopril 5mg daily. |
| Pertinent History | Known history of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation diagnosed 3 years ago. Last episode was 8 months ago and self-resolved. No prior cardioversion. Hypertension. No history of recent chest infection or illness. |
| Last Oral Intake | Had a cup of tea and a scone approximately 1 hour ago. |
| Events Leading | Patient was walking at a leisurely pace around the craft stalls at the Rockingham Community Fair when the palpitations started suddenly with no clear precipitant. |
| Treatment Prior | Nil. No self-administration of additional medications. Bystander provided a chair and kept patient calm. |
| Onset | Sudden onset approximately 20 minutes ago while walking between stalls. |
| Pain | Mild chest fluttering/discomfort rated 3/10. No crushing or squeezing pain. |
| Quality | Fluttering, racing sensation in chest. Not sharp or burning. |
| Radiates | Nil radiation. |
| Severity | 3/10 chest discomfort. Patient describes dizziness as 8/10. |
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives
Diagnosis
This patient is suffering from an acute episode of cardiac dysrhythmia — rapid ventricular rate with signs of haemodynamic compromise (hypotension, diaphoresis, altered GCS, reduced CRT), consistent with her known history of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.
Facilitator Triggers — if trainees miss a critical step
- ! (If the trainee does not measure blood pressure within the first 3 minutes, Dorothy becomes increasingly pale and GCS drops to 13 — she says 'I feel like I'm going to pass out again')
- ! (If oxygen is not applied within 3 minutes of assessment, SpO2 drops to 92% on room air and respiratory distress escalates to Moderate)
- ! (If the trainee attempts to administer GTN without checking blood pressure first, the facilitator reminds them: 'What is Dorothy's current blood pressure?' — BP is 88 systolic, which is a contraindication to GTN)
- ! (If the trainee attempts to administer GTN despite confirmed BP <90 mmHg, Dorothy develops sudden severe dizziness and GCS drops to 12 — state: 'GTN is contraindicated in hypotension <90 mmHg')
- ! (If patient is not positioned appropriately — i.e. allowed to stand or walk — Dorothy nearly collapses and must be assisted back to seated position)
- ! (If the trainee does not arrange urgent transport within 5 minutes of assessment, Dorothy's BP drops further to 82 systolic and she becomes more confused — GCS 13)
Treatment Objectives
- 1. Ensure scene safety and don appropriate PPE
- 2. Perform Primary Survey — confirm patent airway, assess breathing rate and quality, palpate radial pulse and assess quality
- 3. Position patient seated or semi-recumbent — do NOT allow patient to stand or walk given haemodynamic compromise
- 4. Apply SpO2 monitoring — initial reading 95% RA
- 5. Administer Oxygen via simple face mask at 5–8 L/min titrated to maintain SpO2 94–98%
- 6. Perform Vital Signs Survey — obtain BP, pulse, RR, GCS, BGL, temp, pain score
- 7. Recognise hypotension (BP 88 systolic) and rapid irregular pulse (148 bpm) as signs of haemodynamically unstable tachycardia
- 8. Recognise GTN is CONTRAINDICATED due to BP <90 mmHg — do not administer GTN
- 9. Obtain a focused IMISTAMBO-structured history including known AF, warfarin use, and current medications
- 10. Assess and document BGL (6.4 mmol/L — normal, not a contributing factor)
- 11. Reassure patient continuously throughout assessment and treatment
- 12. Limit patient exertion — assist patient to remain seated, do not allow ambulation
- 13. Monitor patient persistently, recording full observations every 10 minutes
- 14. Recognise this presentation as time critical (unstable tachycardia with hypotension and altered GCS) — arrange Priority 1 transport with ambulance upgrade and pre-notify receiving ED
- 15. Contact CSPSOC for advice given haemodynamically compromised dysrhythmia and anticoagulant medication
- 16. Do not attempt rhythm management interventions (cardioversion, Amiodarone, Modified Valsalva) — these are outside EHS scope
- 17. Perform reassessment of vitals at 10 minutes — note partial improvement with oxygen and positioning (SpO2 98%, BP 100/68, GCS 15) confirming correct management
- 18. Prepare for deterioration and potential peri-arrest state — have AED/defibrillator and BVM readily accessible
- 19. Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover
- 20. Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Cardiac Dysrhythmia · Chest Pain / Acute Coronary Syndrome · Oxygen Delivery · Blood Pressure · Primary Survey · Secondary & CNS Survey · Pulse Oximetry
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