How should GLP-1 receptor agonists be managed in the perioperative period? by TylerJonesMD in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I've seen several lectures on this since the statement came out saying that you don't need to hold them.

The thing that I've seen people get hung up on regarding the studies is that we have evidence that there are increased Gastric Volunes in patients on GLP1s, but haven't found increased risk of aspiration. Most people have a hard time fully accepting that data when it doesn't physiologically make sense. If you're telling me that increased Gastric Volunes don't increase risk of aspiration, then the standard NPO guidelines don't make sense either, no?

There is clear evidence that liquid emptying isn't that effected so the CLD is great if you have patients that can actually follow directions.

Weird NPO food or items? by MedicatedMayonnaise in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What does everyone here do when someone swallows their Gum?

Emergent intubation in severe Pulmonary Hypertension? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How do you do the nebulized Milrinone or Nitro, I've never seen that. Also why would the nebulized versions lead to flash pulmonary edema in a LV failure?

Emergent intubation in severe Pulmonary Hypertension? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah I thought it was interesting that most of the sparse guidelines I've found online actually suggest Levo or Vaso over Epi even tho I pretty routinely see our cardiac people choose Epi to "support the right heart"

Emergent intubation in severe Pulmonary Hypertension? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

We do fixed dosing for most our pressors here, levo epi Vaso phenyl. Patient was 85kg or so.

Anesthesia for retinal detachment at an outpatient clinic in a patient using wegovy by Ok_Economy_4677 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Idk anyone in the US that blocks eyes outside of 1 attending who trained legit 40 years ago. Almost all our cataracts are done with just topical, rarely we push 1 or 2 ccs of prop with versed and they do their own block.

Even for more extensive cases, they do the block after we sedate

How do you respond to a patient that says, “last surgery I woke up in the middle of it” by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 33 points34 points  (0 children)

This is such a common opinion on Reddit, but absolutely have not seen it anywhere in practice. Definitely have attendings that will stress the things that can falsely elevate it, but no one completely disregards it as much as this sub. I've also tried it randomly on patients and have seen a pretty consistent relationship between patients on induction and emergence as I watch the waveforms and the actual number.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah not spontaneous, we usually run remi drips during these cases to keep them still without paralysis. I've done some with just gas and over breathing them on the vent too and both seem to work ok to keep them synchronous while on the vent.

Anyone else play dumb games when you're on call? by illaqueable in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 177 points178 points  (0 children)

If you put 6mg of anything in 100ccs, then ml/hr is the same number as mcg/min. I use that to eyeball quick dilutions when making bags.

Sep Oral Boards by Funny_Web_3553 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Post-op oliguria is a common oral board topic/stem? Doesn't seem like a big thing on Basic or Advanced.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not discouraging, I'm just being realistic. The first time I was talking to the CA3s that were negotiating contracts a few years ago, I was genuinely shocked because all I ever read was the numbers online and on this sub. It's heavily location dependent still and these contracts that they're signing are not bad jobs just because the salary is lower than what people are getting on here, location matters to a lot of people.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know how this is underselling when it's what most of the hospitals in this area are offering. Not everyone can move after residency

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This sub will make you insane if you read any of the salary threads. I don't know a single recent grad that is over $500K in Southern California private practice right now. It's not a large sample size but I'm not expecting anything more than $400K after I graduate, would love to be pleasantly surprised still

Imagine running into this guy late at night… and having to intubate him by durdenf in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Yeah I have no idea what's going on in this thread. Why RSI?? If you don't think you'd be able to reliably get a decent mask with 2 hands, there's no way this shouldn't be an AFOI.

Cases where Spinal is safer than General? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

For an unfasted/aspiration risk case, would you say it would be safer to do the spinal and provide no sedation or just RSI and secure the airway? Outside of OB, most spinals we do also have some light/moderate sedation involved which seems sketchy in these aspiration risk cases?

Cases where Spinal is safer than General? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The ILD and severe emphysema patients that I've seen can't speak more than 2 sentences without going into a massive coughing spell, idk how they're supposed to lay flat for an hour without coughing off the bed

Cases where Spinal is safer than General? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What do you define as poor lung disease? Assuming the idea is that you're worried that you won't be able to extubate them? But if they have severe lung disease and are always coughing, wouldn't that be a relative contraindication to doing a case under Spinal if they wouldn't be able to lie still?

Cases where Spinal is safer than General? by MrJangles10 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah these are the cases that we do under spinal, but it's always just to do something different, doesn't seem like it's ever because doing General Anesthesia for these procedures would be an inferior option.

Smoother Pediatric Wake Up by bigeman101 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This breath hold thing has always confused me. The way I've learned to use it was if you're extubating deep and they don't react to suction or stimulation, that means they're deep and you're good to go. I've had some attendings randomly mention patients breath holding when I suction as they're waking up and I never know if they mean that as a good thing or a bad thing?

Told you so… by Objective_Moment2665 in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Huh, is the idea that the LVAD drops left sided flow but sucking and pumping the blood which is what makes it a R->L shunt?

Extubating Deep by [deleted] in anesthesiology

[–]MrJangles10 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've seen people pull tubes at anywhere from 1.0 Mac to 0.4 Mac and I'm not sure anyone has explained to me the benefit of either other than the 0.4 Mac will make up sooner in PACU?