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Just want to ask the group here, who here has it in PACU/readily available, and if so how are you using it in your practice? For rescue only? What dose?
Thanks
Exactly my practice until pharmacy puckered up their pipeline and made it require an act of god or bribery to get it from them. Now patients just get to suffer because some bean counter somewhere wants to go cruising on a private yacht.As above, PO pre-op only. My understanding is that it works extremely well for prophylaxis, but not great as a rescue. It is quite expensive (something on the order of $300 per 40mg pill), and not always covered by insurance- for that reason I reserve it for people with a documented history of severe PONV, and usually talk to patients about it before ordering it. If people have met or are definitely going to meet their deductible, I’ll usually say let’s do it. If there’s a chance that they have to pay for it out of pocket, I let people choose if they want it or not (reminding them that an overnight admission for PONV is also very expensive)
try haldol next timeAt my hospital, had a 40F post cholecystectomy who was supposed to go home. Severe PONV —> tiva, scop, zofran, decadron, reglan, minimal narcotic, etc. essentially had intractable nausea in pacu. Before admitting her, I tried a Hail Mary.
I called pharmacy and they said we have IV fosprepitant. Different dose, cheaper. No nausea after 30 mins.
If your hospital pharmacy flat out rejects aprepitant, I encourage you to push for fosprepitant.
Yes. Potential...From what I have heard, there has never been a documented case of accidental pregnancy.vaguely remember the potential to interfere with hormonal birth control for like a month? Same issue with fosprepitant?
With so many folks using sugammadex, contraception planning should become a larger part of our preop conversations. (Folks don’t seem to remember these talking points when raised in the recovery room.)Yes. Potential...From what I have heard, there has never been a documented case of accidental pregnancy.
vaguely remember the potential to interfere with hormonal birth control for like a month? Same issue with fosprepitant?
our pharmacy doesn't have it, but we did get droperidol again. that's been working like magic.
Our pharmacy told us it was the other way around but we couldn't have either anyways.PO form is readily available at my place with no restrictions (e.g. every crani gets it ordered in preop by default). IV fosaprepitant is also available but needs an order and we're only supposed to use it for severe cases (hx of severe PONV refractory to multiple agents, unable to take PO, as a rescue in PACU if nothing else is working, etc.). My understanding is PO aprepitant is pretty cheap (<$100) and IV fosaprepitant is several thousand dollars.
Thats a smart move Amyl!We don’t give it often in the hospital - I have called in a script for preop for plastics patients w severe histories- not sure the $$$. It does mess w birth control
ok funny because i remembered wrong, and i guess its amisulpride i want ...Use it all the time for bariatrics and hx severe PONV. Have had it not work twice but generally seems to do pretty well.
There’s a rescue drug called amisulpride that’s going around recently. Seems decently effective (and probably $$$).
Never even heard of it before reading this thread.ok funny because i remembered wrong, and i guess its amisulpride i want ...
so anyone give amisulpride and how much? dose? brand?
For some reason our leadership has been pushing amisulpride. I’ve tried it for rescue - idk I’m not impressed.
Droperidol is cheaper but I don’t find it necessary either.
I just don’t have nausea problems - scop patch, phenergan, decadeon, zofran and fluids works for me. Even iv benadryl works - If someone have refractory ponv nothing works like 20 of propofol and a fluid bolus… maybe a little sugar in some form
Why spend all this money on these costly measures. Wake the patients up on a propofol infusion and cut the gas of early. This works better than zofran, benadryl, emend, whatever. Nobody wakes up nauseous with prop, NOBODY…..
Not really true. There are patients who get nausea from psychological causes ( I have seen it) and others who get nausea from the procedure itself (laparoscopy, open eye cases, etc).Why spend all this money on these costly measures. Wake the patients up on a propofol infusion and cut the gas of early. This works better than zofran, benadryl, emend, whatever. Nobody wakes up nauseous with prop, NOBODY…..
Lol. I usually try to get them to take po - but no I usually don’t use the d50… it’s on back order half the time any ways - I have given a little d10.you bolus dextrose and it works?
So did they wake the patients up on the propofol infusion with minimal GAS. Low dose doesn’t do anything. Waking them up on propofol is the most effective method.I’m pretty sure there was a recent study showing propofol infusions in conjunction with volatile anesthetics did not decrease the incidence of PONV. Can’t find the study right now though so I could be making it up.
Edit: just an abstract. http://www.asaabstracts.com/strands/asaabstracts/abstract.htm?year=2021&index=17&absnum=6265
which side effects quite well are you referring to?For decades we used low dose droperidol very effectively and cheaply to prevent N/V. I still use it from time to time and it's safety is well established at doses less than 1.25 mg IV. Please be sure to know its side-effects quite well before giving to an awake patient in PACU.
IM? or do you do IVHaldol 1mg does the trick if all else fails. I've had some people have nausea after propofol use but that is probably psychological
So did they wake the patients up on the propofol infusion with minimal GAS. Low dose doesn’t do anything. Waking them up on propofol is the most effective method.
which side effects quite well are you referring to?
IVwhich side effects quite well are you referring to?
IM? or do you do IV
With minimal narcs emend versed phenergan zofran benadryl decadron and plenty of fluids?ive had patients on TIVA with propofol have PONV in pacu.