| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 97% (RA) | Nil | 18 | 88 | 218/124 | <2s | 14 | 4 4 SL | 37.2 | 6.4 mmol/L | 8 |
| 10 mins | 96% (RA) | Nil | 20 | 92 | 224/130 | <2s | 13 | 4 4 SL | 37.2 | 6.4 mmol/L | 9 |
((If trainees do not perform a BGL โ remind them any patient with altered GCS requires a BGL. Patient remains at 6.4 mmol/L โ no hypoglycaemia.))
((If trainees do not ask about medications or identify the missed antihypertensive doses โ wife becomes visibly distressed and volunteers: 'He ran out of his blood pressure pills two days ago โ could that be it?'))
((If trainees do not identify visual disturbance as a neurological end-organ symptom โ patient begins to describe 'a dark patch' in the upper right field of his left eye at the 8-minute mark.))
((If oxygen is applied unnecessarily to a normoxic patient โ redirect trainees: SpO2 is 97% on RA and patient does not meet criteria for supplemental oxygen; titrate oxygen only if SpO2 drops below 94%.))
((If trainees attempt to administer GTN โ this is a critical error. GTN is NOT indicated for hypertensive emergency without ACS or other authorised indication. GTN is contraindicated without a confirmed cardiac indication. Facilitator states: 'What specific CPG indication authorises GTN here? There is no chest pain and no confirmed cardiac event.'))
((If trainees fail to place the patient appropriately โ patient should be positioned sitting or semi-recumbent. Remind trainees that head elevation assists cerebral venous drainage. Do NOT lay patient flat.))
((If trainees do not identify this as a time-critical presentation requiring urgent transport โ at 12 minutes the patient's GCS drops to 13 and he reports his headache is now 9/10 and he is struggling to identify the correct year. Expedite transport.))
((If trainees do not reassess BP after initial vital signs โ BP has risen to 224/130 at 10 minutes, reinforcing the time-critical nature of the presentation.))
This patient is suffering from a hypertensive emergency (severely elevated BP โฅ180/120 mmHg with evidence of end-organ involvement โ neurological symptoms including severe headache and visual disturbance), in the context of missed antihypertensive medication for two days. The clinical picture raises concern for hypertensive encephalopathy and must be differentiated from acute stroke.
Clinical references: Chest Pain / Acute Coronary Syndrome ยท Stroke (Cerebrovascular Accident) ยท Unconsciousness ยท Transient Loss of Consciousness (Fainting / Syncope) ยท Glyceryl Trinitrate (GTN) ยท Oxygen ยท Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) ยท Blood Glucose Monitor ยท Blood Pressure ยท Primary Survey ยท Secondary & CNS Survey ยท Pain Assessment