An 18-year-old man is brought to your ED by two housemates with an altered conscious state. He is vomiting and complaining of flank pain. Blood tests are taken on arrival; the venous blood gas and initial pathology are shown below.
| Observation |
Result |
| HR |
120 bpm |
| BP |
85/55 mmHg |
| O2 saturation |
99% room air |
| RR |
32/min |
| GCS |
13, confused to time and place |
| Test |
Result |
Reference range |
| pH |
7.1 |
7.35-7.45 |
| pCO2 |
20 mmHg |
40-50 |
| HCO3 |
4 mmol/L |
24-32 |
| Base excess |
-16 |
-3 to +3 |
| Na+ |
135 mmol/L |
135-145 |
| K+ |
6.0 mmol/L |
3.5-5.1 |
| Cl- |
95 mmol/L |
95-110 |
| Glucose |
18 mmol/L |
3.5-7.8 |
| Lactate |
5.2 mmol/L |
0.6-2.4 |
| Haemoglobin |
163 g/L |
135-175 |
| Urea |
10 mmol/L |
1.8-8.2 |
| Creatinine |
148 micromol/L |
44-97 |
| Serum osmolality |
340 mOsm/kg |
285-295 |
Derive three (3) calculations using the shown results to assist interpretation. Include the relevant formulae.
(Marked out of 6.0)
/ 6
State the most likely diagnosis based on your calculations, and one important differential diagnosis.
(Marked out of 2.0)
/ 2
List two (2) other initial investigations that would support the most likely diagnosis, and give a reason for each.
(Marked out of 2.0)
/ 2
Soon after arrival he has a prolonged generalised seizure and is subsequently intubated and ventilated. Aside from ongoing supportive care, state four (4) key ongoing treatment components, including rationale and detail for specific therapies.
(Marked out of 8.0)
/ 8
Total Score: 0 / 18
Percentage: 0%
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