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This article originally posted 17 June, 2012 and appeared in  Safety and Error PreventionTreatment ErrorsDiabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 89

Concussion Patient's Drowsiness Not What it Seemed

I often read these disasters and think that it can never happen to me as I work as a hospitalist in Western Oklahoma. However I now know that it can happen to anyone and anywhere....
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We had a 60 y/o male come into our ED with a concussion suffered in a car accident and we admitted him to the hospital for observation.

The patient was put in a semi-private room with a 58 y/o man who had been admitted for DKA and doing well under our standard hospital protocol.

I was working that evening and got a page from the floor nurse that the DKA patient had taken a turn for the worse and that his glucose levels had spiked at 360 mg/dl even though he had been receiving insulin as prescribed. I had the nurse give 11 units of rapid acting insulin per protocol, and continued my rounds. I received another page to the same room and the nurse explained that the concussion patient had become disoriented and seemed very drowsy.

I rushed to the room and the concussion patient was having a hard time keeping his eyes open. I was about to administer some epinephrine when I remembered that I had received a page for the DKA patient in the same room.

I had the nurse do a fingerstick on my concussion patient and his glucose was 31 mg/dl so we immediately gave the patient an amp of D50 and within 15 minutes the patient was more alert and a check of his glucose gave a reading of 81 mg/dl. I had the nurse do glucose checks every15 minutes to make sure that the levels stayed okay.

Lesson Learned:

It became obvious that the concussion patient had received the insulin instead of the DKA patient and this was the cause of both patients' problems.

Because of mistakes in other areas of the hospital, we go out of our way to decrease the chances of error. As an example in our surgery department if we are doing a knee replacement we indicate with a yes and no written on the knees of the patient.

Maybe we will have to do the same thing with our patients who share a room if one of them is using insulin

Mike MacBrayer, MD

Lawton, OK

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This article originally posted 17 June, 2012 and appeared in  Safety and Error PreventionTreatment ErrorsDiabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 89

Past five issues: Issue 678 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 137 | Issue 677 | SGLT2 Special Edition Issue 2 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 136 |

 
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