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- Mar 29, 2015
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So after reading a lot of the "deep extubation" threads in this forum i've been trying it increasingly on my patients (CA–1 here). Works like a charm. The thing is that in my center abdominal cases are extubated awake by law.
We use mainly Sevo which usually led to a patient coughing and bucking endlessly for an eternity before he actually wakes up... I hate this. Sometimes the attending will just pull the tube out when the pt doesn't stop coughing (but still eyes closed) and they sometime larygospasm (positive pressure does the trick most of the time). Those of you who like to deep extubate have this policy also? Or you do the same in this type of cases (chole lap, gastrectomies, hiatal hernias, etc)? What about appendectomies if you didn't found the need for RSI (no emesis, properly fasted)?
Consider deep extubation as 0.3–0.4 MAC with Narcotics going on (RR 8–12), just enough to prevent the coughing but having a theoretical gag reflex on board.
Thx in advance!
We use mainly Sevo which usually led to a patient coughing and bucking endlessly for an eternity before he actually wakes up... I hate this. Sometimes the attending will just pull the tube out when the pt doesn't stop coughing (but still eyes closed) and they sometime larygospasm (positive pressure does the trick most of the time). Those of you who like to deep extubate have this policy also? Or you do the same in this type of cases (chole lap, gastrectomies, hiatal hernias, etc)? What about appendectomies if you didn't found the need for RSI (no emesis, properly fasted)?
Consider deep extubation as 0.3–0.4 MAC with Narcotics going on (RR 8–12), just enough to prevent the coughing but having a theoretical gag reflex on board.
Thx in advance!