Responders combat minus
55 degree wind chill
A 64-year-old man survived a
life-threatening stroke this
past weekend due in part to the
quick response and acts of
courage by Crested Butte Search
and Rescue volunteers and local
Emergency Medical Service
professionals.
During the early morning
hours of Friday, December 28,
Gunnison 911 dispatch received a
call reporting an older man was
experiencing a stroke near Dead
Man’s Gulch south of Crested
Butte. The man was staying with
his wife in a cabin
approximately six miles up
valley from the winter trailhead
located at the Cement Creek
campground, according to EMS
coordinator Ross Orton.
Local police, Crested Butte
Search and Rescue and Emergency
Medical Services responded to
the call. Crested Butte Search
and Rescue volunteers Ric Ems
and Charley Dumas, both
residents of Crested Butte
South, were the first on the
scene after they decided to head
straight to the trailhead rather
than meeting at search and
rescue’s equipment cache in
town.
Crested Butte Emergency
Medical Technicians Andrew Gitin,
Richard Kalasky, and Val Nuemann
also responded immediately.
With the search and rescue’s
snowmobiles and Orion sled i.e.
covered toboggan for
transporting patients buried in
snow in Crested Butte almost 15
minutes away, the crew realized
that they wouldn’t have time to
retrieve it.
That’s when Ems and Dumas
jumped on a single snowmobile
together and headed up the
drainage, despite the
dangerously cold weather with
temperatures hitting minus 20
degrees and wind chills near
minus 55 degrees.
“We were prepared to go out
in the worst weather,” Dumas
says.
Dumas says the decision to
travel in such extreme
circumstances was made after all
of the first responders agreed
they had a very short window to
transport the victim to the
hospital for treatment. “Time
was of the essence,” Dumas says.
According to Orton, when
someone experiences a stroke
they can be treated with a drug
used to dissolve clots, but the
drug must be administered within
three hours of the stroke. Orton
says the rescuers had determined
that almost 25 minutes had
already lapsed by the time
everyone met at the trailhead.
“We had a very black and white
window of opportunity,” Orton
says. “…and we realized we were
pushing the three hour window.”
When Ems and Dumas arrived at
the cabin they found the victim
was conscious but had
experienced severe complications
from the stroke. Ems and Dumas
dressed the patient for the
severe weather and traveled back
to the trailhead. “They
basically bundled the patient
with blankets and sandwiched him
between the two of them, and
rode back to the trailhead,”
Orton explains.
Dumas says the couple
did have a snowmobile and sled,
but due to the cold weather it
was not operational. Several
search and rescue volunteers
returned to the cabin to
retrieve the victim’s wife.
After returning to the
trailhead, the patient was
transported via ambulance to the
Gunnison Valley Hospital where
he was administered the drug tPA
(tissue plasminogen activator)
with less than 13 minutes to
spare. Orton says the patient’s
health had already started
improving by the time he was
transported via helicopter to
Swedish Hospital in Denver.
Stroke is the third leading
cause of death and the leading
cause of adult disability in the
United States.
Orton says the Crested Butte
Search and Rescue receives about
a dozen different calls a year,
and this call had a high level
of danger because of the extreme
cold. “Any exposed flesh would
freeze, so it made (the call)
special,” Orton says. “I was
really impressed with search and
rescue and everyone involved.”
Orton says the outcome could
have been much different if it
wasn’t for Ems and Dumas’ quick
response. “It definitely would
have been bad if we missed the
three-hour window – the outcome
would likely have been poor,”
Orton adds.
Orton says the Crested Butte
EMS also attended to a heart
attack victim on Sunday,
December 30. Orton says a
58-year-old male, who started to
experience symptoms of a heart
attack at the base of Crested
Butte Mountain Resort, was in
transport to the Gunnison Valley
Hospital when he went into full
cardiac arrest.
Paramedics Chris Evans,
Richard Kalasky and Alister
Bland administered treatment
including shocking the patient
with a defliberator and was able
to revive the patient. Orton
says the incident was the first
time in the fire district’s
history that an EMS crew was
able to save a patient that was
in full cardiac arrest.
“I am really proud of the
crew,” Orton says. “We have a
highly trained group of
individuals.”
Registered nurse Chris Evans,
who was one of paramedics on the
call, says although it is her
job to help those who are
injured or sick, she still is
moved by moments similar to that
in the ambulance.
“I was almost giddy (to see
him wakeup), that’s why we do
this,” Evans says. “It’s very
rare for a cardiac patient to
come back, so it felt very good
and it’s why I volunteer.”
Orton says the fire district
receives on average 500 to 600
EMS calls per year. |