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Emergency Medicine Journal -

The decision was shared with Mr. Patel’s wife, who tearfully agreed to both – “Do everything.”

Emergency Medicine Journal – Narrative Case Series Presentation It was a Tuesday afternoon in a busy UK district general hospital. The department was in its usual post-lunch chaos when triage flagged a 58-year-old man, Mr. Patel, as “priority 2 – possible stroke.” The paramedic handover was clipped: “Found by his wife at home, last known well 45 minutes ago. Sudden right-sided weakness, slurred speech, and facial droop. GCS 14. BP 185/100, HR 88, SpO₂ 97% on air. Blood glucose 6.2 mmol/L.” emergency medicine journal

Author: Dr. A. Rivers, Emergency Department, City General Hospital The decision was shared with Mr

Meanwhile, the nurse recorded a blood pressure of 205/110. James recalled the 2024 EMJ guidelines: BP >185/110 is a relative contraindication to IV alteplase unless rapidly controlled. He ordered IV labetalol 10 mg push. As the labetalol took effect (BP 168/94), Mr. Patel suddenly became agitated. His left arm began jerking rhythmically. The monitor showed tachycardia to 120. Junior doctor Sarah shouted, “Seizure?” James shook his head – the movements were focal, but the patient’s eyes were deviated to the left, and he was unresponsive. Patel, as “priority 2 – possible stroke