Scenario — Unresponsive female — suspected opioid overdose
intermediate Toxicology · Adult · 35yr · female
Patient Information
| Dispatch | You are called to the First Aid Post at Ascot Racecourse. A female has been found unresponsive in the public amenities block by event security. (Sarah Donoghue, 35YO female) |
| Patient | Sarah Donoghue — 35yr (65kg) |
| Incident History | Security found Pt slumped on the floor of a toilet cubicle, unresponsive. A small zip-lock bag and a used syringe were found near the patient. Pt is breathing but slowly. |
| Emergency Contact | Mel Donoghue (Sister) — 0412 883 447 |
Initial Rapid Assessment
| Response | Pain |
| Airway | Partially obstructed — gurgling/snoring respirations. Tongue relaxed against posterior pharynx. Secretions visible in oropharynx. Suction required. |
| Breathing | Slow, shallow, irregular. RR 6. Minimal chest rise. Cyanotic lips noted. No wheeze or stridor. |
| Circulation | Slow, weak radial pulse. Skin pale, cool and clammy centrally. No external haemorrhage. Track marks noted to left antecubital fossa. |
| Disability | GCS 6 (E1V2M3). Not orientated. No purposeful movement. Pinpoint pupils bilaterally. |
| Exposure | Used syringe found adjacent to patient. Zip-lock bag with residual white powder. No obvious trauma. No medic alert identified. |
Vitals
| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 82% (RA) | Severe | 6 | 52 | 88/54 | 4s | 6 | 2 2 — | 35.8 | 4.6 mmol/L | – |
| 10 mins | 96% (O2 NRB 15L/min) | Moderate | 10 | 64 | 96/60 | 3s | 8 | 2 2 — | 35.8 | 4.6 mmol/L | – |
History Taking
| Signs/Symptoms | Unresponsive, snoring respirations, pinpoint pupils, pale and clammy skin, cyanotic lips. |
| Allergies | Unknown — patient unable to provide history. No medic alert identified. |
| Medications | Unknown. Used syringe and white powder residue at scene suggestive of illicit opioid use. |
| Pertinent History | No history obtainable from patient. Security advises Pt was attending the event alone. No witnesses to the incident. |
| Last Oral Intake | Unknown. |
| Events Leading | Pt was attending the horse racing event as a patron. Found alone, unresponsive in a locked toilet cubicle. Security used an emergency release to gain access. |
| Treatment Prior | Nil — no bystander treatment prior to EHS arrival. Security did not attempt any first aid. |
| Onset | Security last walked past amenities block approximately 20 minutes ago — Pt was not found at that time. Estimated down-time unknown, potentially 15–25 minutes. |
| Pain | Nil — patient unresponsive to verbal stimuli, responds only to pain. |
| Quality | Decreased conscious state with respiratory depression consistent with opioid toxidrome. |
| Radiates | Nil |
| Severity | GCS 6. Critical presentation. |
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives
Diagnosis
This patient is suffering from opioid toxicity (overdose), presenting with the classic opioid toxidrome: decreased conscious state (GCS 6), pinpoint pupils, severe respiratory depression (RR 6), hypoxia (SpO2 82% RA), bradycardia, and hypotension. A used syringe at scene strongly supports IV opioid administration as the cause.
Facilitator Triggers — if trainees miss a critical step
- ! (If the trainee does not suction and clear the airway within 60 seconds of arrival — the patient's gurgling worsens and SpO2 drops to 76%. Prompt: 'You can hear a loud gurgling noise with each breath.')
- ! (If the trainee does not insert an OPA or NPA to maintain the airway after suctioning — the airway obstructs again and SpO2 fails to improve above 86% despite oxygen application.)
- ! (If high-flow oxygen via NRB mask is not applied within 2 minutes — cyanosis deepens and GCS drops to 4 (E1V1M2). Prompt: 'The patient's lips appear darker blue and her breathing has slowed further.')
- ! (If the trainee does not perform a BGL — facilitator prompts: 'You want to rule out other causes of altered conscious state. What else might be contributing?')
- ! (If the trainee does not collect the syringe and bag as evidence for the ambulance crew — facilitator prompts at handover: 'The paramedic asks if there were any clues about what the patient may have taken.')
- ! (If the trainee does not position patient in the lateral position once airway is managed — patient vomits and there is a risk of aspiration. Prompt: 'The patient begins to retch.')
- ! (If BVM ventilation is not considered or commenced despite RR of 6 and SpO2 not improving above 90% on NRB — facilitator prompts: 'Despite high-flow oxygen, her saturations remain at 88% and her chest rise is barely visible. What else can you do to support her breathing?')
Treatment Objectives
- 1. Ensure scene safety — don appropriate PPE including gloves and eye protection given presence of used syringe and unknown substance at scene.
- 2. Perform Primary Survey — identify immediately life-threatening airway obstruction and severe respiratory depression.
- 3. Suction the oropharynx using Yankauer catheter to clear secretions — maximum 5 seconds per pass.
- 4. Insert an appropriately sized oropharyngeal airway (OPA) — measure from centre of lips to angle of mandible — to maintain airway patency.
- 5. Administer high-flow oxygen via Non-Rebreather Mask (NRB) at 15 L/min — target SpO2 94–98%.
- 6. If SpO2 does not improve above 90% or RR remains ≤6 with inadequate tidal volume — commence assisted BVM ventilation at 10–12 breaths per minute with high-flow oxygen at 15 L/min.
- 7. Place patient in lateral position (left lateral) once airway is secured and adjunct in place — to reduce aspiration risk and maintain drainage.
- 8. Perform Vital Signs Survey — GCS, SpO2, RR, pulse, BP, skin signs, pupils, temperature.
- 9. Perform blood glucose level (BGL) test — rule out hypoglycaemia as contributing cause of altered conscious state. Result: 4.6 mmol/L — no glucose treatment required.
- 10. Assess pupils — pinpoint bilateral pupils consistent with opioid toxidrome. Document finding.
- 11. Inspect scene — safely collect used syringe (place in sharps container if available), zip-lock bag with residue, and any other medications or substances. Place in patient medications bag and hand over to ambulance crew.
- 12. Repeat vital signs at 10 minutes — document response to oxygenation and airway management.
- 13. Note: Naloxone administration is outside EHS scope of practice. Do not attempt to administer naloxone. Maintain supportive airway management and oxygenation until ambulance arrival.
- 14. Maintain continuous monitoring — observe for vomiting, further deterioration in GCS, or respiratory arrest. Prepare to commence CPR as per Cardiac Arrest CPG if patient loses pulse or ceases breathing.
- 15. Brief ambulance crew on IMISTAMBO handover — include toxidrome findings (pinpoint pupils, RR 6, GCS 6), scene evidence collected, interventions performed, and response to treatment.
- 16. Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
- 17. Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Poisons & Overdoses · Unconsciousness · Oropharyngeal Airway · Nasopharyngeal Airway · Suction · Bag Valve Mask Ventilation · Oxygen Delivery · Lateral Position · Blood Glucose Monitor · Primary Survey · Secondary & CNS Survey
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