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Emergency Medicine 201

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  1. Intro to Emergency Medicine
    6 Topics
    |
    2 Quizzes
  2. Rapid Sequence Intubation
    8 Topics
    |
    2 Quizzes
  3. Cardiac Arrest Pharmacotherapy
    8 Topics
    |
    3 Quizzes
  4. Hyperglycemic Crisis: Diabetic Ketoacidosis and Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic Syndrome
    11 Topics
    |
    3 Quizzes
  5. Community-Acquired Pneumonia
    7 Topics
    |
    3 Quizzes

Participants 396

  • Allison Clemens
  • April
  • ababaabhay
  • achoi2392
  • adhoward1
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Lesson 2, Topic 3
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Pretreatment drugs: Rapid Sequence Intubation

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Rationale:

  • Laryongoscopy can activate coughing and gagging
  • Most common conditions that pretreatment drugs utilized:
    • Infants: Bradycardia
    • Adults: High BP, Bronchospasm, Increase ICP and Heart Rate
  • In highly emergent cases it is not worth waiting for pretreatment and can proceed with intubation without waiting for pretreatment.

Fentanyl

  • Mechanism of Action:
    • Central-acting opioid agonist used to blunt the sympathetic surge with pain receptor stimulation that occurs with intubation.
  • Rational:
    • May be useful in patients where blunting of the sympathetic response is critical
  • Dose: 2-3 mcg/kg i.v
  • Pharmacokinetics
    • Onset: < 1 min
    • Duration: 30-60 min
  • Adverse Effects
    • Respiratory depression
    • Chest wall rigidity
      • More common following large doses (eg, >100 μg/kg)

Atropine

  • Mechanism of Action:
    • Atropine is used to blunt vagal response by antagonism of muscarinic receptors of the parasympathetic nervous system.
  • Rational:
    • The process of intubation can stimulate a strong vagal response in young pediatric patients.
  • Dose: 0.01-0.02 mg/kg IV
  • Pharmacokinetics
    • Onset: 2-16 min
    • Duration: 30-60 min
  • Adverse Effects
    • Tachycardia, dry mouth, flushing, and urinary retention

Lidocaine

  • Mechanism of Action:
    • Lidocaine is an amide anesthetic, a class 1B antiarrhythmic, that blocks sodium channels in neurons, eliminating their ability to depolarize and carry signals.
  • Rational:
    • In theory, lidocaine is used to suppress the cough reflex which may lead to mitigating ICP elevation during RSI.
    • Lidocaine may inhibit bronchospasm in patients who have reactive airway disease, induce GABA receptors, suppress other reflexes, and depress the brain stem which leads to mitgation of ICP elevation during RSI.
  • Dose: 1.5 mg/kg IV
  • Pharmacokinetics
    • Onset: 45–90 seconds
    • Duration: 10–20 minutes
  • Contraindications
    • Lidocaine is absolutely contraindicated in patients with an amide anesthetic allergy, severely bradycardic, or who have severe heart block.
  • Adverse Effects
    • Hypotension