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I ll agree with start the treatment of dehydration; however we do not completely replace it. That is all that I meant when I said that. There is truly very little we can do other than treat the symptoms. Would you agree?
I was told by a Paramedic t if you couldn't Laplace a vein you could spray Ntg on it
* Giving a patient a dose of NTG (which is what spraying NTG on the skin does -- anyone remember the dosing on a nitropatch?) to facilitate IV access, doesn't seem like a good idea.QUOTE]
This makes me wanna slap someones mama
I'm hit-or-miss.
So far, I've only practiced with 20g in a non-moving ER setting for clinicals.
I'm about 50-50. I don't know how the eff I'm gonna get good at this in the back of a moving truck.
I look to you, oh wise veterans to tell me where my *ss is and where my elbow. :unsure:
PLEEZ HALP.
Yea it was a pretty seasoned Paramedic that told me that trick. Haven't used it myself and don't plan to. I was just curious of what you guys thought.
What do you do when you have a hypotensive, dehydrated, skinny 80-year-old lady?
For what it's worth, I was told the same thing myself when I was training. But I still think it's a terrible idea.
Try one on yourself.
Also those hard stick pts i like to use a BP cuff for a tourniquet instead of the band...
From experience I would not do this if the truck is moving
If you get any sort of blood on your gloves or the screw which deflates the BP cuff you're gonna have a hard time deflating it...