Coronial
VIChospital

Finding into death of John Crabtree

Deceased

John Crabtree

Demographics

69y, male

Coroner

Deputy State Coroner Paresa Spanos

Date of death

2016-05-26

Finding date

2021-10-29

Cause of death

Myocardial infarction secondary to coronary artery atherosclerosis in the setting of infective exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

AI-generated summary

Mr Crabtree, a 69-year-old man with intellectual disability, COPD, emphysema and heavy smoking history, presented to the ED with respiratory distress on 26 May 2016. He was diagnosed with infective exacerbation of COPD and treated for septic shock. However, autopsy revealed acute myocardial infarction secondary to critical coronary artery atherosclerosis. A planned ECG was not performed due to patient restlessness. The coroner found no clinical fault with ED or GP management based on information available at the time, but noted that an early ECG might have identified MI and potentially altered outcome if the patient was stable for catheterisation. A significant delay (58 minutes) in calling an ambulance from the group home was identified as a contributing factor that delayed medical attention, though survival remained unlikely given extensive coronary disease.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes. Report an inaccuracy.

Specialties

emergency medicinegeneral practicerespiratory medicinecardiologypathology

Error types

diagnosticdelay

Drugs involved

amoxicillin/clavulanateatorvastatinparacetamol

Clinical conditions

myocardial infarctioncoronary artery atherosclerosischronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseemphysemainfective exacerbation of COPDpneumoniaaspergillomaseptic shockcardiogenic shockhypercholesterolaemiaParkinson's diseaseintellectual disabilityhearing impairmentvision impairment

Procedures

electrocardiogramchest X-rayblood testcardiopulmonary resuscitationcardiac monitoring

Contributing factors

  • Extensive coronary artery atherosclerosis with critical narrowing of all three major coronary arteries
  • Infective exacerbation of COPD with pneumonia and aspergilloma
  • Heavy smoking history
  • Hypercholesterolaemia
  • Delay of 58 minutes in calling ambulance from group home
  • Failure to perform ECG in ED despite being clinically indicated
  • Diagnostic uncertainty between septic shock and cardiogenic shock
Full text

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