NomadicMedic
I know a guy who knows a guy.
- 12,190
- 6,953
- 113
It's not THAT short acting. The duration of action varies per person and dose, but 10mg seems to be an adequate sedation dose for my short, under 20 minute transports.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
How often would you readminister midazolam? Every 2-3 minutes? The book didn't mention a sedation dose in this procedure, but the dose I was taught in school was 2-5 mg q 2-3 minutes to a max of 0.1 mg/kg. Seems like I'd be giving a lot of midazolam in a short amount of time.
Systemet, how come? Instead of a paralytic, just maintain sedation instead?
Midaz usually works about 40 minutes for me. Edit In doses of 0.075mg/kg-0.15mg/kg
(forgot to list the range)
I think this is the problem I'm seeing. We're giving 0.1mg/kg (max 5mg), which is really 0.1mg/kg for anyone under 50kg, and about 0.05mg/kg for someone who's 100kg. Admittedly, we're giving this with fentanyl and there's some synergism there, but the onset seems pretty slow.
I believe I read somewhere that you can judge if a patient is sedate well based on their pleth waves too. I'll Google that now.
Edit: And also other things like tachycardia and movement would make sense. Not going to base it on just one thing.
I believe I read somewhere that you can judge if a patient is sedate well based on their pleth waves too. I'll Google that now.
Edit: And also other things like tachycardia and movement would make sense. Not going to base it on just one thing.
I think this is the problem I'm seeing. We're giving 0.1mg/kg (max 5mg), which is really 0.1mg/kg for anyone under 50kg, and about 0.05mg/kg for someone who's 100kg. Admittedly, we're giving this with fentanyl and there's some synergism there, but the onset seems pretty slow.
Defasciculation sounds logical, although I've never seen it done outside of through OR. If anyone has good references on what it does to the risk of succinylcholine-induced hyperkalemia or MH, I'd love to see them.
No references sorry, but the rationale behind a "defasciculating" dose on a non-depolariser is to avoid the post-operative myalgia that often comes with sux. It doesn't appear to work for that either, and that is the least of ones worries if you are pulling out the scary drugs.
I have to admit a personal bias in that I find bolus dosing of sedation to be a bad idea. It is far to easy to lose track of time and have unwanted peaks and troughs of analgesia and sedation, which does no-one any good.
I've said it a million times before: RSI needs to be done properly or not at all.
No references sorry, but the rationale behind a "defasciculating" dose on a non-depolariser is to avoid the post-operative myalgia that often comes with sux. It doesn't appear to work for that either, and that is the least of ones worries if you are pulling out the scary drugs.
I have to admit a personal bias in that I find bolus dosing of sedation to be a bad idea. It is far to easy to lose track of time and have unwanted peaks and troughs of analgesia and sedation, which does no-one any good.
I've said it a million times before: RSI needs to be done properly or not at all.
So you're saying we shouldn't perform sedation unless we have the ability to run the benzo as a continuous infusion?
I'm curious how many ALS agencies, aside from CCT trucks, allow a sedation infusion. I've not seen any...
I'm curious how many ALS agencies, aside from CCT trucks, allow a sedation infusion. I've not seen any...
No references sorry, but the rationale behind a "defasciculating" dose on a non-depolariser is to avoid the post-operative myalgia that often comes with sux. It doesn't appear to work for that either, and that is the least of ones worries if you are pulling out the scary drugs.
I've said it a million times before: RSI needs to be done properly or not at all.
Why would you need it?
On a critical patient in the OR, we're going to be giving bolus doses (when we give them). If you have a critically ill patient in transport, taking the time to set up an infusion for a relatively short transport to the hospital is pointless. Inter-facility transports are a different thing.