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Hi!
Question regarding these two. Do purely IM/CC boarded physicians have opportunities to become proficient in bronch and bedside trach? Or are these reserved for the pulm and surgery types?
Perc trachs.... ain't nobody got time for that!!
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Perc trachs are kind of fun. They are probably the most badass surgical procedure you can get in pulm/cc . I see 10 to 14 critical care pts , dictate 10 minute long progress note 10 times a day, and have 5 goals of care discussion on the chronically ill 97 yr olds but I didn't go into critical care for that. I went into it for the perc trach or the high stress intubation in the pt with a respiratory code.
Totally depends on your level of interest . Sometimes helps if you get close to an interventional pulm guy during fellowship . I did a 2 year pure CC fellowship and did between 15 and 20 trachs and 100s of bronchoscopies. Did about a month of IP ( just because I was interested and ended up with 25 EBUSes and 10 navigational bronchs along with 25 non intubated bronchs with biopsies . That was overkill as I only do intubated bronchs now but my bronch skills are way better than many CC guys .
It's good to learn perc trachs , but only practice as an attending if you have supportive ENT guys who don't want to do them but will bail you out if you have a problem. The more depth you have in procedures you will be better at dealing with emergent stuff like emergency cric/ trach if ENT is not around.
That's cool you did interventional pulm stuff.
With IM/CC, if you managed to do a lot of that with the IP folks during fellowship, is it possible to get hired to do outpatient bronchs as well?
That's cool you did interventional pulm stuff.
With IM/CC, if you managed to do a lot of that with the IP folks during fellowship, is it possible to get hired to do outpatient bronchs as well?
I would quibble that a bronch in the icu on a ventilated patients isnt really a real bronch! Ha!
Go through tube. Suck out mucous and or do BAL.
Although that's most of it, massive hemoptysis, difficult airway intubation, and foreign body aspiration are some of the more cooler indications.
That's cool you did interventional pulm stuff.
With IM/CC, if you managed to do a lot of that with the IP folks during fellowship, is it possible to get hired to do outpatient bronchs as well?
I've done tons of bronchs and awake/asleep intimations as part of Anesthesiology residency. I'd never even dream a hospital would credential me for outpatient bronchs - you go see a pulmonologist for this.
Outpatient bronchs are a very different beast.
could learn it.I did a good number of outpatient bronchs during CC fellowship. There is 1 additional skill to learn that is to intubate the vocal cords with the scope. I won't do it now because I don't do those often but I am sure acould learn it.
I thought biopsies or foreign body extraction were kind of challenging until anesthesia called me to the OR to extract a foreign body on the weekend when pulm was off and it went without issue.
As a (future) anesthestiologist/intensivist, if I'm putting a hole in a neck it had better be an emergency.Perc trachs.... ain't nobody got time for that!!
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A non Pulmonologist should not be doing outpt bronchs independently .
There is more to EBUS than Bx of 2 cm Station 7 .
ICU vent bronchs are a different story and pretty easy to learn.
Thinking of the medico legal aspect of a botched outpt bronchoscopy by a non pulmonary doctor is a nightmarish situation no sane hospital administrator would want to get into.
One thoracic surgery guy used the same monkey analogy for VATS .
Outpt bronch is not a critical care procedure . Period . Let alone EBUS/ Nav
That is besides the point . I don't go to the OR to administer GA because I think I can or do colonoscopy/ cystoscopy as I know how to handle a scope .No (sane) person becomes an intensivist to do outpatient bronchs. There's more exciting things to do in life.
That being said, EBUS isn't neurosurgery... I know Pulm fellowships where fellows have a total of 150 bronchs under their belt when they graduate. Not sure how many of those are EBUS but doubt it's that many and they seem to be doing just fine in practice.
Outpatient bronchs aren't that cool and don't reimburse that well anyway.
No (sane) person becomes an intensivist to do outpatient bronchs. There's more exciting things to do in life.
That being said, EBUS isn't neurosurgery... I know Pulm fellowships where fellows have a total of 150 bronchs under their belt when they graduate. Not sure how many of those are EBUS but doubt it's that many and they seem to be doing just fine in practice.
Outpatient bronchs aren't that cool and don't reimburse that well anyway.
No (sane) person becomes an intensivist to do outpatient bronchs. There's more exciting things to do in life.
That being said, EBUS isn't neurosurgery... I know Pulm fellowships where fellows have a total of 150 bronchs under their belt when they graduate. Not sure how many of those are EBUS but doubt it's that many and they seem to be doing just fine in practice.
Outpatient bronchs aren't that cool and don't reimburse that well anyway.
Is it true that a ICU vented pt bronchoscopy with BAL and outpatient bronchoscopy with biopsy don't pay that much different. The outpt un-intubated patient getting biopsy has considerable risk/ liability and the vent pt BAL takes 5-10 minutes and has little risk if you know what you are doing. At a private hospital where I worked the private pulm groups were always fighting each other for the chance to bronch a vent pt.
I should do more bronch with BALs on vent pts with resp failure would get decent (2.78 RVUs) . But since I am hospital employed and a glutton for punishment I spend a lot of my time on difficult arterial lines which have terrible RVUs and take 30 minutes or more sometimes without success .
Is it true that a ICU vented pt bronchoscopy with BAL and outpatient bronchoscopy with biopsy don't pay that much different. The outpt un-intubated patient getting biopsy has considerable risk/ liability and the vent pt BAL takes 5-10 minutes and has little risk if you know what you are doing. At a private hospital where I worked the private pulm groups were always fighting each other for the chance to bronch a vent pt.
I should do more bronch with BALs on vent pts with resp failure would get decent (2.78 RVUs) . But since I am hospital employed and a glutton for punishment I spend a lot of my time on difficult arterial lines which have terrible RVUs and take 30 minutes or more sometimes without success .
Bronching someone that does not need to be bronched( mucus plug) is wrong and bad karma.
No matter how good it may $eem
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IMHO Bronch with EBUS or even navigational bronch is a pretty useless skill to have as a critical care doc. I just can't come up with one scenario where its justified. Why are you trying to sample enlarged lymph nodes or get that peripheral lesion in the ICU? I am not talking about the ability to do it, I am talking more why the need to learn it??
NAV with EBUS staging actually has reasonable wRVU for the time spent. Not as good as vented patients but definitely better than seeing patients in clinic.