- Joined
- Sep 20, 2010
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I recently butted heads with an anesthesiologist who accused me of mismanaging a case. I'm not in anes myself , but I'm on call for the surgical ICU occasionally. This is what happened:
79YO man with severe peripheral arterial disease. Was in internal medicine ward due other comorbidity, and threw a clot to his leg during his stay there. Was transferred to surgical ICU, and from there to OR for endovascular procedure.
The patient is returned to the ICU the same evening. Signout from PACU nurse to our team as follows: "did well postop but was slightly hypotensive and tachycardic. We gave 500cc of colloid, much better after that. Is somnolent, but rousable, probably still from GA. " 15 minutes later I am called urgently to the bedside. Guy is in florid hemorragic shock. 54/30, 120/min, stuporous. The abdomen is massively distended. To liven things up, the patients one and only peripheral iv just came out and none of the people present can manage a new one (which is saying something with our team!).
I did the following things:
1. Call vascular surgeon, tell him to have an OR prepped NOW
2. sent a nurse RUNNING for O neg blood
3. quickly inserted femoral DVC, fluids and blood wide open, small sprinkling of epinephine
4. Intubation (no induction meds needed)
These 4 things took me 15 minutes, max. We then RAN the patient to the OR. The patient did reasonably well afterwards.
The anethesiologist on call surprisingly tore me a new one when we arrived in the OR. In his opinion, I lost time with the DVC and the tube. I should have transported the patient to the OR (which is NOT close to the ICU!) without a line or a tube, in order to gain time.
In my humble opinion this is the most dimwitted suggestion I have ever heard. I would have smacked any med student who came up with it over the head. But this guy is 25 years my senior. Am I missing something here?
Please weigh in.
79YO man with severe peripheral arterial disease. Was in internal medicine ward due other comorbidity, and threw a clot to his leg during his stay there. Was transferred to surgical ICU, and from there to OR for endovascular procedure.
The patient is returned to the ICU the same evening. Signout from PACU nurse to our team as follows: "did well postop but was slightly hypotensive and tachycardic. We gave 500cc of colloid, much better after that. Is somnolent, but rousable, probably still from GA. " 15 minutes later I am called urgently to the bedside. Guy is in florid hemorragic shock. 54/30, 120/min, stuporous. The abdomen is massively distended. To liven things up, the patients one and only peripheral iv just came out and none of the people present can manage a new one (which is saying something with our team!).
I did the following things:
1. Call vascular surgeon, tell him to have an OR prepped NOW
2. sent a nurse RUNNING for O neg blood
3. quickly inserted femoral DVC, fluids and blood wide open, small sprinkling of epinephine
4. Intubation (no induction meds needed)
These 4 things took me 15 minutes, max. We then RAN the patient to the OR. The patient did reasonably well afterwards.
The anethesiologist on call surprisingly tore me a new one when we arrived in the OR. In his opinion, I lost time with the DVC and the tube. I should have transported the patient to the OR (which is NOT close to the ICU!) without a line or a tube, in order to gain time.
In my humble opinion this is the most dimwitted suggestion I have ever heard. I would have smacked any med student who came up with it over the head. But this guy is 25 years my senior. Am I missing something here?
Please weigh in.