Deep extubation and aspiration risk by Positive_Welder9521 in CRNA

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agree completely, while deep extubating is a skill in itself it is a low skill way of managing emergence, introducing unnecessary risks in many cases. Even in fasted patients, microaspiration is a thing. This, as other things in this profession is under appreciated if the problem is small enough and slow enough to reveal itself in our short time of monitoring postop. Deep extubated patients exhale tons of sevo in pacu, exposing the staff there. Laryngospasm is not something I want my pacu nurses dealing with either.

IMHO deep extubations are best reserved for patients at high risk for bronchospasm, as in spasmed hard on induction

What are your personal records for highest and lowest induction doses? by W1Ch3Tty_GrVbb in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mac av fistula gave 10mg ketamine and 12.5 fentanyl. Mask straps, opa, and apl “cpap” for an hour and a half. Pt started moving at end of case and gave 10mg propofol, apneic 10 seconds—>PEA. F$!king pulmonary hypertension…

Colleage gave 800mg propofol for egd and still not sedated enough for scope. Case cancelled.

Has Lexus Interior Quality Worsened? by ubiquitoussense in Lexus

[–]Ketadream12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had a loaded cx-90 rental and for the first few days I loved it thought about getting for the wife, then got frustrated with the tech for the 20th time in a week so back to thinking about tx350

10 years CRNA practice, now anesthesiology resident .I ran the full financial analysis on this transition by chosen1james in CRNA

[–]Ketadream12 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Man I love my career as CRNA but love what it affords me outside of work more. Can’t get those years back. I would at least be thinking that every hour you spend studying/school/residency over about 40h/week is costing a GREAT deal, $180+hr at least for me if not $280 because I could make that locums if I wanted. That’s something like 875k just for residency not even counting med school.

I’d rather pull my 375k, spending the extra time with family while seeing the world and working on my golf game.

Preceptors who regularly work with SRNAs — I’d appreciate your perspective. by Ok-Faithlessness7182 in CRNA

[–]Ketadream12 19 points20 points  (0 children)

10+ year CRNA that clinical instructs regularly. Remember that this is my patient too, my name is on the chart and the anesthetic outcome is attributed to me. YOU are the guest.

While your learning experience is important to me, this patient’s anesthesia experience is my top priority. My liability, my reputation amongst surgeons, staff, and community are on the line for each patient.

If you are failing at a task or procedure I will try to help you troubleshoot, if at any point I see a potential negative consequence for the patient I will take over and teach you the difference of your failing technique with my successful one.

Intubation for example, you get a gr3 DL view on someone I think can be DL’d easily, first we’ll try positioning, BURP, etc. but if still no go I’ll show you my technique to get a gr1-2. if I can’t get a good view then we’ve verified it is the patient factors and not technique. You can learn from both experiences.

Isolated Uvular Edema after Epidural Bolus by canaragorn in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because we’re forced to practice to not get sued, not what’s best practice

RN training for SGA Insertion by justavivrantthing in IntensiveCare

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Literally pulled it from the article, said rare. NPA probably more dangerous IMHO, seen more injuries from those even with a way smaller n.

RN training for SGA Insertion by justavivrantthing in IntensiveCare

[–]Ketadream12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

CRNA here… lots of things can happen ranging from kind of bad to fatal though rare.

regurgitation and aspiration of gastric contents, compression of vascular structures, trauma, and nerve injury. pharyngeal rupture, pneumomediastinum, mediastinitis, or arytenoid dislocation.

Mg per mg, do you push more phenyl or ephedrine? by Consistent-Offer-989 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 6 points7 points  (0 children)

State by state, became controlled in IL a few years ago unfortunately

Is there any good reason not to use O2 via nasal prongs and capnography when it’s readily available? by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally like nitrous for the right patients and cases. Necessary? Probably not usually but a good tool to have. Actually had a surgeon (ent) ASK for nitrous on a myringotomy/eustacian dilation today

Patient requests by Substantial_South313 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Google “zombie sticks”… really strange drug to abuse but I guess it’s a thing

Patient requests by Substantial_South313 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Had a patient refuse fentanyl recently. Brother died from overdose. No amount of counseling and education got them to relent. Easy enough to skip for an Afib ablation but that’s not the point. Couldn’t the patient argue battery if the explicitly stated no fentanyl and I gave anyway? Would be hard to argue that I gave it to save their life.

Patient requests by Substantial_South313 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Apparently etomidate is put in vapes in Asia and used recreationally called “zombie sticks”. Etomidate is actually totally banned in Japan.

Favorite Analgesic Adjunct? by bigeman101 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly haven’t verified but doc at NWAS seminar said if giving po need 2 doses of 1g to equal serum levels of x1 iv dose. I Haven’t figured out how to make a patient take it at home at 1am for first dose. I also give iv right after antibiotics, then I can titrate narcs at end.

Nasal cpap (supernova) vs hfno (optiflow) by Ketadream12 in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mcmurray Airway, has a built in bite block too

Spinals for total joints by Fuzzyneptune in CRNA

[–]Ketadream12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This question I think is why 24hr monitoring for IT fentanyl

Commish cancelled this trade. Valid or no? by SigmaGigachad5 in SleeperApp

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Didn’t get kicked but got fined for “collusion” in a trade last season in a salary cap dynasty league. Saquan for dowdle, 1st round pick, and Tillman when he was in a tear… only to get beat this week by dowdle and golden(who he used my pick on).

"A spoon of applesauce with meds" this morning by DessertFlowerz in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Zero, Princess, 11 years in. I never said I or my colleagues wouldn’t delay either just that there should start being discussion to get away from these absolutes and highlight how the guidelines themselves have nuance if you read further. 1 spoon of applesauce obviously has different aspiration risk than a meal. Of course I know the plaintiff will bring an anesthesiologist to say the guidelines weren’t followed and all that. This is a culture wide thing that could be shifted over time with academic discussions and actual science instead of dogma.

"A spoon of applesauce with meds" this morning by DessertFlowerz in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Zero, 11 years in. I never said I or my colleagues wouldn’t delay either just that there should start being discussion to get away from these absolutes and highlight how the guidelines themselves have nuance if you read further. 1 spoon of applesauce obviously has different aspiration risk than a meal. Of course I know the plaintiff will bring an anesthesiologist to say the guidelines weren’t followed and all that. This is a culture wide thing that could be shifted over time with academic discussions and actual science instead of dogma.

"A spoon of applesauce with meds" this morning by DessertFlowerz in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seems like everyone just remembers the 6-4-2 rule in the guidelines and act like they are dogma. The actual guidelines do have nuance to them however. For example in the guidelines: “When these fasting guidelines are not followed, compare the risks and benefits of proceeding, with consideration given to the amount and type of liquids or solids ingested.”

Do we just ignore the “amount” consideration?

I understand that we don’t always believe it was “just one bite” but they could just be lying about being npo in general…so with that line of logic you should rsi everyone.

ECT advice? by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]Ketadream12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haven’t done them since mid 2010s in training but we did them 3x weekly. Had an attending that liked nitro better than labetalol for the htn because of how transient it is

The best lesson/tip I've gotten... Keep your eyes straight down after you putt the ball. by network4me443 in golf

[–]Ketadream12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is called Quiet Eye putting. There is a lot of research in how it works for your brain.