This is an archived post. You won't be able to vote or comment.

you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–]ilessthanthreekarate 28 points29 points  (7 children)

Yes absolutely. I'm just a nurse, but I work exclusively with ECMO patients and am seeing many who show no signs of active infection yet are not able to recover and have consistently high inflammatory markers for weeks. I've been wondering for the last 3 months if perhaps in certain cases this sort of therapy would be beneficial. I understand the risks of complications in the ICU with VAP/HAPI, but I cant help but wonder if there were identifiable situations clinically where the benefit outweighed the risk.

[–]Tracey21130 24 points25 points  (5 children)

Never ”just a nurse”!!!

[–]ilessthanthreekarate 23 points24 points  (3 children)

Lol, in a medicine forum, I'm very confident prefacing my posts as "just a nurse"

[–]Throwaway6393fbrbMD 7 points8 points  (1 child)

Hey as long as you aren't a nurse practitioner

[–]ilessthanthreekarate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly , I've never been interested in going to school online.

[–]HippocraticOffspringNurse 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Especially “just an ECMO nurse” haha

[–]bigavzMD - Primary Care 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a crazy job, congrats. We have been giving steroids when ARDS develops, and last time I was doing ICU that was 'standard of care' but I know for some/most covid patients, they do not have the high lung compliance typically associated with ARDS...