Scenario — Sudden onset facial droop and arm weakness at AFL game
intermediate Neurological · Adult · 35yr · male
Patient Information
| Dispatch | You are called to the northern grandstand concourse at Optus Stadium. A 35-year-old male has been found slumped on a bench by a friend. Bystanders report he suddenly couldn't speak properly and his face 'looked funny'. |
| Patient | Brendan Holt — 35yr (80kg) |
| Incident History | Pt was watching the AFL match with friends when he suddenly complained of a bad headache, then within minutes became unable to speak clearly and his right arm felt heavy and weak. Friend called for EHS immediately. |
| Emergency Contact | Kylie Holt (Wife) — 0412 774 883 |
Initial Rapid Assessment
| Response | Alert |
| Airway | Patent. Nil obstruction. Nil stridor. Patient able to attempt vocalisation but speech is slurred and difficult to understand. |
| Breathing | Adequate rate and depth. Nil increased work of breathing. Nil accessory muscle use. |
| Circulation | Radial pulse present, regular, normal rate and strength. Skin warm, dry, normal colour. Nil external bleeding. |
| Disability | GCS 13 (E4V3M6). Alert but confused and dysphastic. Not oriented to time. Right facial droop noted. Right arm weakness on command — unable to raise arm above shoulder level. Left arm and both legs appear normal strength. |
| Exposure | Nil rashes, nil trauma, nil medical alert jewellery visible. Dressed in AFL jersey and shorts. |
Vitals
| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 97% (RA) | Nil | 16 | 88 | 158/94 | <2s | 13 | 4 4 ++ | 36.8 | 5.6 mmol/L | 7 |
| 10 mins | 96% (RA) | Nil | 17 | 90 | 162/96 | <2s | 12 | 4 4 ++ | 36.8 | 5.6 mmol/L | 7 |
History Taking
| Signs/Symptoms | Sudden severe headache, slurred speech, right-sided facial droop, right arm weakness and heaviness. Denies vision changes. Denies chest pain or shortness of breath. |
| Allergies | Nil known drug allergies. |
| Medications | Nil regular medications. |
| Pertinent History | No known history of hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, or previous stroke or TIA. Non-smoker. Occasional alcohol. No recreational drug use reported by friend. |
| Last Oral Intake | Had a meat pie and two beers approximately 90 minutes ago. |
| Events Leading | Pt was seated watching the AFL match. Stood up briefly during a goal celebration, sat back down, then immediately complained of sudden severe headache and right-sided weakness. No fall, no head strike, no trauma. |
| Treatment Prior | Nil. Friend sat him down on the bench and called for help immediately. |
| Onset | Acute onset approximately 25 minutes ago during the match. Friend reports patient was completely normal immediately prior. |
| Pain | Severe sudden-onset headache — occipital, described as 'worst headache of his life'. |
| Quality | Headache described as a sudden explosive pressure. Right arm described as feeling 'dead and heavy'. |
| Radiates | Headache does not radiate. Arm weakness localised to right upper limb. |
| Severity | Headache 7/10. Arm weakness prevents elevation above shoulder level. |
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives
Diagnosis
This patient is suffering from a suspected acute stroke (cerebrovascular accident) with features of left hemisphere involvement — right-sided facial droop, right arm weakness (hemiparesis), and expressive dysphasia, with sudden-onset severe headache raising concern for possible haemorrhagic aetiology.
Facilitator Triggers — if trainees miss a critical step
- ! (If BGL is not tested within the first 3 minutes of assessment, prompt the trainee: 'Your partner asks — have you checked his sugar?')
- ! (If time of symptom onset is not established, patient's friend taps the officer on the shoulder and says 'It happened about 25 minutes ago — I checked my watch when it started')
- ! (If the trainee does not note the right-sided facial droop and arm weakness during the initial rapid assessment, patient attempts to lift his right arm and it falls back to his lap — have friend say 'He keeps dropping his arm like that')
- ! (If oxygen is applied unnecessarily to a patient with SpO2 97% on room air, remind trainee of oxygen titration principles — oxygen is only indicated if SpO2 falls below 94%)
- ! (If the trainee does not establish time of onset within 5 minutes, GCS drops one point to 12 and trainee must reassess urgency)
Treatment Objectives
- 1. Ensure scene safety and don appropriate PPE — standard precautions
- 2. Perform Primary Survey: airway patent, breathing adequate, circulation intact, disability assessed including GCS
- 3. Note right-sided facial droop, expressive dysphasia, and right arm weakness during disability assessment
- 4. Perform Blood Glucose Level test — result 5.6 mmol/L (rules out hypoglycaemia as cause of neurological deficit)
- 5. Establish and document exact time of symptom onset — 'approximately 25 minutes ago' — this is critical for stroke bypass eligibility
- 6. Perform Vital Sign Survey: BP 158/94, HR 88, RR 16, SpO2 97% (RA), Temp 36.8°C, GCS 13
- 7. Do NOT administer oxygen — SpO2 97% on room air is above the 94% threshold; oxygen is not indicated
- 8. Position patient comfortably — seated or semi-recumbent; do NOT lay flat as BP is elevated
- 9. Perform Secondary and CNS Survey: assess facial symmetry, upper and lower limb strength bilaterally, pupil response, and speech
- 10. Reassure patient continuously — patient is alert and will be frightened; use simple clear language
- 11. Contact State Operations Centre (SOC) immediately — this is a time-critical neurological emergency requiring Priority 1 transport and ambulance upgrade
- 12. Gather and document IMISTAMBO handover information: time of onset, BGL, neurological deficits, vital signs, medications and allergies
- 13. Do NOT administer any medications — no EHS-authorised medication is indicated in this presentation; aspirin is contraindicated until haemorrhagic stroke is excluded
- 14. Do NOT perform FAST or RACE assessment — these are Intermediate Care and above tools and are outside EHS Primary Care scope; document clinical findings that will support handover
- 15. Monitor patient persistently — record full observations every 10 minutes; note any deterioration in GCS or new neurological deficits
- 16. Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover
- 17. Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Stroke (Cerebrovascular Accident) · Unconsciousness · Hypoglycaemia · Primary Survey · Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) · Blood Glucose Monitor · Oxygen Delivery
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