| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 97% (RA) | Nil | 18 | 92 | 218/126 | <2s | 15 | 4 4 ++ | 37.1 | 5.8 mmol/L | 9 |
| 10 mins | 97% (RA) | Nil | 16 | 88 | 214/122 | <2s | 15 | 4 4 ++ | 37.1 | 5.8 mmol/L | 8 |
((If the trainee does not obtain a blood pressure within the first 2 minutes of assessment, the patient begins to complain that her vision is getting worse and she feels increasingly nauseous β prompt by saying 'I feel like something is really wrong, my eyes aren't right.'))
((If the trainee does not identify the missed antihypertensive medication as a critical complicating factor during history taking, the patient volunteers the information: 'I did forget to take my blood pressure tablet⦠I left it at home. It's been two days now.'))
((If the trainee fails to perform a brief neurological assessment β facial symmetry, upper limb grip strength, speech β escalate: patient develops a mild right-hand grip weakness and begins to slur slightly β this represents a neurological deterioration warning sign requiring immediate escalation and urgent transport.))
((If the trainee attempts to administer GTN for the elevated BP: remind them that GTN is only indicated by EHS CPG for chest pain/ACS, ACPO, Autonomic Dysreflexia and Irukandji sting β not hypertensive emergency in isolation. GTN is NOT indicated here. The trainee should not administer GTN.))
((If oxygen is applied without clinical indication β SpO2 is 97% on room air β challenge the trainee: 'Why are you applying oxygen? What is her SpO2?' Oxygen is NOT indicated in this scenario at this SpO2 level.))
((If the trainee does not recognise this as time-critical and does not call for ambulance backup promptly, the patient's GCS drops to 14 (E4V4M6) at 8 minutes β patient becomes confused and does not know what year it is β indicating neurological deterioration requiring immediate Priority 1 transport and pre-notification.))
This patient is suffering from a hypertensive emergency (hypertensive crisis) with associated severe headache and visual disturbance, likely secondary to two days of missed antihypertensive medication in a patient with known hypertension.
Clinical references: Chest Pain / Acute Coronary Syndrome Β· Stroke (Cerebrovascular Accident) Β· Unconsciousness Β· Autonomic Dysreflexia Β· Transient Loss of Consciousness (Fainting / Syncope) Β· Primary Survey Β· Secondary & CNS Survey Β· Blood Pressure Β· Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) Β· Blood Glucose Monitor Β· Pain Assessment Β· Oxygen Delivery