No matter what was wrong, a line with D5W, 1 amp of Bicarb and a 100mg Lidocaine bolus followed by a drip at 2mgs/min would fix it.
And don't forget, the IV has to be in a glass bottle
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No matter what was wrong, a line with D5W, 1 amp of Bicarb and a 100mg Lidocaine bolus followed by a drip at 2mgs/min would fix it.
Seriously ? WowNo matter what was wrong, a line with D5W, 1 amp of Bicarb and a 100mg Lidocaine bolus followed by a drip at 2mgs/min would fix it.
I too remember to day of doing mouth to mouth, stopping long enough to spit the pt's vomit from your mouth and then continuing, I remember using the EOA, always had a problem with snapping the mask in place and ,holding a good seal, Is it not blasphmy to work in ems or the fire service and have NO knowledge of John G and Roy D,this should be required watching material, even though sodium bicarb is no longer a front line drug.
I never found the EOA to be particularly useful.
I would have to disagree... I found the EOA a wonderful device for the time. Having placed numerous of them... they gave me great frustration in maintaining a good facial seal( good for training skills ), allowed copious useage of Kentucky Jelly ( which I always loved lubing up ), it plugged the puke hole so nothing would ever come out, it was nice to intubate around, it provided a great bite block for the ETT, it gave you something else to do while doing CPR in the checkout line at a grocery store to look cool for the crowds watching ( just under flipping the abboject caps off and defib with paddles with the lifepak 4/5. ) and it came in a great big, space occupying white and yellow box that no one can miss.
Just about everything just short of good ventilation. :blush: :wacko:
I would have to disagree... I found the EOA a wonderful device for the time. Having placed numerous of them... they gave me great frustration in maintaining a good facial seal( good for training skills ), allowed copious useage of Kentucky Jelly ( which I always loved lubing up ), it plugged the puke hole so nothing would ever come out, it was nice to intubate around, it provided a great bite block for the ETT, it gave you something else to do while doing CPR in the checkout line at a grocery store to look cool for the crowds watching ( just under flipping the abboject caps off and defib with paddles with the lifepak 4/5. ) and it came in a great big, space occupying white and yellow box that no one can miss.
Just about everything just short of good ventilation. :blush: :wacko:
And I still think the LP10 is one of the best monitors ever. Simple, effective, very straightforward, has paddles but can convert to handsfree.
Heh... NYS requires Medics to still be trained in EOA/EGTA, Combitube, LMA< and other obsolete airways. We also train on both old and newer monitors.
I belong to two services, one uses LP12, the other Zoll M. And I still think the LP10 is one of the best monitors ever. Simple, effective, very straightforward, has paddles but can convert to handsfree.
Considering that tomorrow out of all the patients placed under general anesthesia the majority will have a LMA placed to facilitate ventilation and provide airway protection I'm not sure I'd consider it "obsolete".
I actually used them all the time in the 80's worked quite well. The Paramedics in CA could not intubate until sometime in the 90's but yet had the highest save rate in the country, probably due to time & preventing aspiration.I could insert an EOA in about 3-5 seconds. As far as seal they were made with a extremely plyable material seal was never a problem.Ahh yes, the "airway" that still required the user to maintain a mask seal. Good times...
You're right, I'm sorry, I didn't specify. The LMA is obsolete as a pre-hospital airway. It is useful as a temporary airway in a stable environment, but has too many contraindications and doesn't protect the airway well enough for an emergency airway, IMO.
The others are obsolete due to advancements and improvements.
And you're right, the LP10 can't do a 12-lead, nor ETCO2 or SPO2... But it's a great monitor.
You're right, I'm sorry, I didn't specify. The LMA is obsolete as a pre-hospital airway. It is useful as a temporary airway in a stable environment, but has too many contraindications and doesn't protect the airway well enough for an emergency airway, IMO.
The others are obsolete due to advancements and improvements.
And you're right, the LP10 can't do a 12-lead, nor ETCO2 or SPO2... But it's a great monitor.
I'm curious which contraindication you refer to that don't apply to other SGA's, and also which other SGA protects the airway better than an LMA?
I definitely wouldn't call the LMA obsolete. And it most certainly doesn't belong in the same category as the EOA and Combitube.....even if for no other reason than that it's still widely used.
You might be able to make a good case that the King or another SGA is better for general prehospital use for some reason, and that's fine, but the LMA is a great tool that remains the standard against which all other modern SGA's are measured.
Personally, an intubating LMA will probably always be my backup airway for an emergent situation, whether I'm in the ambulance, the helicopter, or the OR. At least until I'm convinced that something else is better.