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Do you guys routinely give Bicitra for elective c-sxns prior to spinal?
Do you guys routinely give Bicitra for elective c-sxns prior to spinal?
same here.our group has not done it routinely in 4 years
same here.
I've seen so many yack that crap up the moment they swallow it. Tastes quite awful.
I gave it since they're all full bellies. Quite frankly, for a elective c/s via spinal, I don't understand the need for it. Airway reflexes are intact and they are awake, they aren't going to aspirate.
If this was a GA or urgent/emergent case - then I would totally use it without questions.
I am always happy when I see them vomit. Less crap in the stomach.
It matters when it becomes a GA. Which is certainly rare, but it does happen.
I've seen so many yack that crap up the moment they swallow it. Tastes quite awful.
I gave it since they're all full bellies. Quite frankly, for a elective c/s via spinal, I don't understand the need for it. Airway reflexes are intact and they are awake, they aren't going to aspirate.
If this was a GA or urgent/emergent case - then I would totally use it without questions.
If you have no chance of a high spinal and no chance of converting to GA during a c-section, then you obviously don't need to give bicitra. In my experience, the chances of either scenario are > 0. In those situations, I'm quite glad I gave bicitra ahead of time because you can't give it during the case.
Besides, the taste isn't that bad. I actually like it.
The only time I have ever had a high spinal in my relatively short career was following the hat-trick per my attending's recommendations as a CA-1
dose up a patchy epidural (and yes, I did tell said attending it was patchy, I didn't trust it) ---> spinal with low dose ----> high spinal ----> RSI GETA --- luckily the pt was tiny with a super easy airway.
I give it to all my c-sections. I have had to convert a spinal to general anesthetic a couple of times in my short career and was very glad we gave bicitra preop. Incidentally I have found that the patients who drink the bicitra without making a disgusted face often have much happier husbands and lower incidence of pre-eclamspia(wasnt their a study on this).
This has been discussed here before extensively and I had the same thing happen to me as a resident.
High spinals, converstaions to GA after spinal are so rare in my practice that I dont see the need to make patients want to vomit.
Thats why we stopped, more vomiting with bicitra than without it.
It makes people vomit!That doesn't match up with my experience. To be honest, I don't think I've ever seen a patient vomit from the Bicitra. From spinals (hypotension)? Sure. Uterus getting dragged out and aired out on her belly? Sure. And lots of women are drama queens who make faces, but honestly the stuff isn't that bad. I'm all for being sensitive to patient comfort and not needlessly inflicting discomfort or indignities on them, but singling out Bicitra as so offensive that ignoring the ASA guideline to give it just seems a little odd to me.
Granted, a guideline is not a standard.
Also, there's a lot of discussion of irrelevancies here.
The point of giving Bicitra has absolutely nothing to do with nausea or vomiting. Counting how many patients puke or don't puke after a spinal, or how good we are at preventing that with purple syringes or Zofran, isn't relevant. That tree isn't even in this forest.
The point of the Bicitra is to raise the pH of gastric contents in case conversion to GA is necessary, in order to reduce the severity of the aspiration pneumonitis that can occur following induction of general anesthesia, passive regurgitation, and aspiration of stomach acid. The patients Bicitra is intended to protect aren't nauseous because they're unconscious, and they're not vomiting because they're unconscious.
I gave it routinely to everyone in residency. For a long while afterwards, I didn't, figuring the NNT might be a million or a billion. I'm not doing any OB these days but I will again soon. I'll probably go back to giving it unless or until the ASA guideline changes.
We gave it to every single patient when I was a resident. Rarely saw patients vomit.It makes people vomit!
And the ASA and its guidelines are full of crap half the time!
I guess the patients who come to the university hospital to have babies have stronger stomachs than the ones you see in private practice!We gave it to every single patient when I was a resident. Rarely saw patients vomit.
It makes people vomit!
And the ASA and its guidelines are full of crap half the time!
I am objecting based on my personal observation during the past 14 years... this medication makes people vomit and it serves no purpose!No it doesn't. Again I don't believe I've ever seen any woman yak after drinking the Bicitra. The drama queens screw up their noses and gripe, but I've never seen one puke it up after drinking it.
It's not a shot of $6/gallon tequila.
Maybe there are drama queen anesthesiologists out there telling their patients "this stuff is SOOOO awful it's gonna make you puke!" 🙂
I agree, guidelines aren't standards, and the evidence isn't always compelling. In the case of Bicitra, the ASA guideline (ie "the consultants and ASA members agree") is just expert opinion, the weakest possible category of evidence.
It sounds like most of your entire argument comes down to: I don't have to do what those stupid ivory tower busybodies say I should do, because out here in the private practice real world, I know how things really are.
So what are you really objecting to, specifically?
The high NNT, cost, time, being nice and not asking patients to drink something that tastes sorta funny ... or are you really sticking to the claim that it induces vomiting ipecac-style?
If you had a pregnant patient come in, and she needed a c-section, and for whatever reason she refused a spinal, would you give her Bicitra? Why or why not?
You didn't call me a drama queen... did you?No it doesn't. Again I don't believe I've ever seen any woman yak after drinking the Bicitra. The drama queens screw up their noses and gripe, but I've never seen one puke it up after drinking it.
It's not a shot of $6/gallon tequila.
Maybe there are drama queen anesthesiologists out there telling their patients "this stuff is SOOOO awful it's gonna make you puke!" 🙂
I agree, guidelines aren't standards, and the evidence isn't always compelling. In the case of Bicitra, the ASA guideline (ie "the consultants and ASA members agree") is just expert opinion, the weakest possible category of evidence.
It sounds like most of your entire argument comes down to: I don't have to do what those stupid ivory tower busybodies say I should do, because out here in the private practice real world, I know how things really are.
So what are you really objecting to, specifically?
The high NNT, cost, time, being nice and not asking patients to drink something that tastes sorta funny ... or are you really sticking to the claim that it induces vomiting ipecac-style?
If you had a pregnant patient come in, and she needed a c-section, and for whatever reason she refused a spinal, would you give her Bicitra? Why or why not?
I don't give Bicitra to anyone because I am not convinced it serves any purpose... remember this statement because I can assure you in a couple of years some guy who wants to achieve academic glory will publish a study showing that Bicitra is actually Voodoo!I'm with pgg on this, even if the Bicitra increases nausea that doesn't necessarily imply an increased risk of aspiration when inducing GA.
In residency I had an elective C section, with a God awful new attending who breathed down my shoulder as I placed the spinal which ultimately failed as we made incision. Emergent conversion to GA.
Prop + Sux given ->> before I put the blade in, the ladys mouth filled up with green juice. After aggressive suctioning, I quickly got the ETT in (while actively seeing said green juice dripping out of the trachea as the tube went in). I commenced to freak out but my attending calmly replied "simmer down we gave bicitra before the spinal"
Patient didnt desat much and after aggressive suctioning through the tube before emergence, we extubated at the end of the case. Mom coughed a lot but did fine.
I think the risk of facing a tragic outcome with a new mom in the ICU with ARDS from aspiration PNA, though a tiny risk is worth the increased risk of N/V.
Anyone know of evidence that Bicitra actually improves outcomes when patient aspirates? Does it increase aspiration risk? Hmm
🙂 Just messing with you.You didn't call me a drama queen... did you?
Anyone know of evidence that Bicitra actually improves outcomes when patient aspirates? Does it increase aspiration risk? Hmm
I actually give it maybe once a month when I get a patient who takes antacids or PPI's but forgot to take them the day of surgery.🙂 Just messing with you.
So, is there no circumstance in which you'd ever give anyone Bicitra?
edit - Just saw your last post in which you said you wouldn't - fair enough.
I wanna see if you'd said it in court. Dear jury, ASA is crap, I know better.It makes people vomit!
And the ASA and its guidelines are full of crap half the time!
I give it to all my c-sections. I have had to convert a spinal to general anesthetic a couple of times in my short career and was very glad we gave bicitra preop. Incidentally I have found that the patients who drink the bicitra without making a disgusted face often have much happier husbands and lower incidence of pre-eclamspia(wasnt their a study on this).
So you are suggesting that we should adopt the crap the ASA produces so we don't get sued?I wanna see if you'd said it in court. Dear jury, ASA is crap, I know better.
So you are suggesting that we should adopt the crap the ASA produces so we don't get sued?
I thought that as a consultant in this field you should be entitled to use your clinical judgement and do what you feel is better for your patient...Frequently the answer to that question is YES.
I thought that as a consultant in this field you should be entitled to use your clinical judgement and do what you feel is better for your patient...
Apparently I was wrong!