What follows first is fiction:
“482. Lawrence Street. 2nd Floor, unknown on a one. PD on the way. Advise when you get there.” We were around the corner having just cleared Hartford Hospital. “Shouldn’t we wait for the cops?” I said, as Troy grabbed his house bag and monitor from the side door. “No, it’s shift change. We’ll be out of here before they even get here. Besides it’s just going to be an OD. This place is the junkie’s version of Studio 54. They buy their heroin down the street, and then head for their club. They ought to install an emergency syringe of narcan behind glass on the wall up in the shooting gallery. Then when one of them stops breathing, his homeys can break the glass, pull out the syringe and zap them with the narcan without having to bother us.” Narcan was to heroin what kryptonite was to Superman. It worked by reversing the effects of the opiate on the brain. Once injected in the body, it raced up to the brain, kicked down the party door, slapped the brain hard and said “Wake the fuck up! The shindig’s over!” Within moments of getting injected with narcan a previously stuporous junky was on his knees puking, his high gone, his mind a stoned out Daffy Duck “Who? What? When? Where? Why?” routine until he finally recognized a paramedic standing over him, and realized he’d gotten “that narcan shit.” A skinny woman who looked like she hadn’t bathed for days met us out in front of the abandoned partially burned out building and led us up the staircase to the second floor, then down a hallway to a room without a door. I carried a flashlight with the plastic IV bag wrapper over the light creating a makeshift torch. We saw a man laying against a wall, a belt around his left bicep. The syringe lay on the floor just beyond his fingers. Troy leaned down and felt the man’s neck. From where I stood I could he was still breathing, but only a few times a minute. “How well do you like this guy?” Troy asked the woman who’d led us to him. “I like him better now he paid me the money he owe me.” The unconscious man’s wallet protruded from his pants. A roll of bills stuck out of the woman’s shirt pocket. “Pretend he’s dead. Okay?” “He’s dead?” “No, no, he’s not. We’re going to save him. I just want you to pretend that he’s dead when he comes around. Can you do that?” “I think I got you,” the woman said. “You giving him that narcan shit?” Troy took the prefilled syringe out of his pocket. “This going be good,” the woman said. Troy wiped a spot on the man’s shoulder with an alcohol prep, then stuck in the syringe and pushed the drug. “What’s his name?” Troy asked, as he discarded the syringe in the sharps container in the bag. “Samuel.” “Lee, grab the tarp over there.” I could see the man was beginning to breathe better, rousing. I handed the tarp to Troy. Troy leaned down and whispered in the man’s ear. “Next stop. Pearly Gates. Pearly Gates. Next.” Troy spread the tarp out next to the man whose eyes were now open though he looked groggy and diaphoretic. He sat up suddenly, fighting back a retch. I thought he might throw up. “It’s a shame we didn’t get here in time,” Troy said. “I hate to see a life end like this. You have anything you want to say about your friend?” “That motherfucker owed me money, but I still tried to save his life.” “You almost did, but we were late I’m afraid. Here lies…What did you say his name was again?” “Samuel. Samuel Pugh.” “Here lies Samuel Pugh. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Another one’s gone, another one’s gone…” He looked to me. “Another one bites the dust,” I said. “That’s what he gets for not listening to his Mama. Let’s go eat. I could go for tacos.” “Hey,” the man on the ground said. “You hear anything?” Troy asked. “No,” I said. “But I don’t hear so well.” “I don’t hear nothing,” the friend said. “I thought I heard something.” “Hey!” The man grabbed Troy’s leg. “I know you. You the one always giving me that narcan shit, motherfucker.” Troy started shaking in mock fear. “Do you guys see anything?” “No, I don’t see anything,” I said. “Me neither.” “Something’s touching my leg. I can’t move it.” “Quit fucking around. Let’s get out of here.” “I swear something’s got my leg.” “I got your leg motherfucker. I ain’t dead.” “Your imagination again,” I said. I lifted the tarp up, and pointed at the floor. “See. Dead is dead. Cut it with your seeing ghosts again.” The man let go of Troy’s leg. “I ain’t dead.” He touched his chest and face. He looked alarmed. “What’s that shit?” “Oh, dear!” Troy stared in mock horror at the apparition. “I’m not well.” He grabbed the medic bag and walked toward the stairway, shaking his head. “He’s been seeing ghosts all weekend,” I said to the woman, as we started to walk away. “He must work too hard.” “Wait! I ain’t dead!” The man called after us as he tried, stumblingly, to get to his feet. “I ain’t dead!” – excerpt from Mortal Men
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Above is an excerpt from the EMS novel I have been reworking on for the last many years. It seems every EMS novel or movie has an obligatory wake the junkie up with narcan chapter and I, as evidenced above, am as guilty as the rest.
What follows now is true: When I was in paramedic school one of my instructors boasted of fellow medics bringing junkies into ERs with a loaded narcan syringe in the junkie’s IV, and slamming the narcan as they’d go through the ED door so the junkie would sit up and puke all over the medic’s nemesis — the evil nurse at triage. We all thought that was funny in class, and while I have heard versions of this story told by many people from many parts of the country, I never did it and never saw anyone do it or even heard of it really truly happening. I did, however, slam narcan into lots of junkies and wake them up. When I say slam, I’m not taking about pushing the narcan in like I push adenosine, but I probably pushed it as fast as I would push a routine flush. In other words, too fast for narcan. I’d slam it. They’d puke, curse, rip their IV out and stalk off.
One guy I found in an abandoned building. His brother had flagged us down. The man had been missing for a day until his brother discovered him. He was out cold, but he was still breathing. I was real new and excited and so I am sure I pushed the narcan way too fast. I probably gave the full 2.0 dose all at once as well. The next thing I knew the man who was now semi-awake was in such severe pulmonary edema that I was hitting him with Lasix (a drug for another blog post). The sudden pulmonary edema was completely unexpected. I asked a doctor at the ED about it, and she said, it can happen when you push narcan. I’d had no idea.
Over the years my practice has changed. Maybe I was improperly instructed at the beginning, but I went from putting an IV into every junky and slamming the narcan to doing it IM or SQ and pushing it very slowly and just a small amount (0.4 mg) at a time. Just enough to get their respirations going and not even wake them up fully. Slamming a full dose of narcan is not a good thing to do. Its puts them into sudden withdrawal and that is not good. Nor is the violence that may ensue. It used to be if I was called for an OD and the patient had used heroin, they got narcan even if they were breathing okay. As long as they were slightly altered, I’d hit them with it. Even if they were talking to me. I thought that was what I was supposed to do.
“Did you do drugs?” “No.” “Then why do you keep dropping asleep?” “I didn’t do drugs.” I’d push the narcan. They are wide awake and puking. Stupid. Them and me. “Did you do drugs?” “No.” “Then why are you wide awake now and puking?” I don’t give narcan now as much as I used too because I don’t work in the city nearly as much, plus now, like I said, I only give narcan if I suspect an opiate overdose and the patient’s respirations are extremely depressed.
Sometimes I bring heroin users in to the hospital and the first thing the hospital staff does is give the patient narcan. Wake them up and make them puke. I shake my head. That’s just no way to treat people. Put them in a hallway and let them sleep it off — as long as they are breathing okay.
We also used to give narcan as a diagnostic for coma of unknown etiology. That was an indication listed in our protocols. We removed that indication several years ago, and I think it is a good thing. Here’s two cases where I gave narcan to coma of unknown origin with bad consequences.
1. I had just started as a medic and found a paraplegic unresponsive in bed. He was a young guy who had been shot a few years before and ended up like he did — living in a small room with a bed, a big screen TV and stacks and stacks of DVDs. He was stuporous when I found him. I should also point out he had a bad fever. Knucklehead that I was, seeing his pin point pupils and all the prescription pain pills — opiates — I zapped him with narcan. So now I went from a patient in a smi-coma due to a fever to a patient in a semi-coma due to a fever in excruciating pain. He became extremely agitated with good reason. I’d just zapped all the pain medicine he needed to tolerate living into the ether. My bad.
2. Called for a possible stroke, I found an 80-year-old female with altered mental status of sudden onset, unable to speak or respond. I loaded her quick, raced toward the hospital, calling in a stroke alert. I then happened to notice her pupils were pinpoint so, as a stab in the dark, I gave her narcan. Amazingly she woke up within a minute. I told the driver to slow down and called the hospital back to say never mind about that stroke alert. I had woken granny up with narcan. The odd thing about it was I couldn’t find any opiates on her list of meds and she denied taking any drugs or even having a secret stash of cough syrup. Odd. At the hospital, her whole family was gathered around laughing with her when suddenly she gorked out again. She had a head bleed and her waking up (her lucid interval) had just happened to correspond with my giving her narcan. So narcan as a diagnostic had actually led me to the wrong diagnosis.
Rogue Medic and Ambulance Driver have some excellent material on this whole issue of the inappropriate use of narcan. Narcan Solves the Riddle, Part I More Rogue Medic Narcan Posts Ambulance Driver Article “Naloxone: The Most Abused Drug in EMS” I particularly like this quote from a Boston Medic that Ambulance Driver cites in his article: “Addicts take opiates and other sedatives specifically to induce a pleasant stupor.
If they’re lethargic and hard to arouse, but still breathing effectively, it’s not an overdose. It’s a dose.” – experienced Boston paramedic
Rogue Medic sites an excellent study done years ago in LA. The empiric use of naloxone in patients with altered mental status: a reappraisal. The study asked the following questions