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- Attending Physician
Yes, it is a good idea and it helps in PACU.Saw someone do this before emergence while on the interview trail for jobs and just curious if anyone else does this...tried to read up on it but wasn't terribly successful so just curious for some anecdotal input.
Saw someone do this before emergence while on the interview trail for jobs and just curious if anyone else does this...tried to read up on it but wasn't terribly successful so just curious for some anecdotal input.
Why? I do it regularly, last longer than ivI think it sounds silly.
Why? I do it regularly, last longer than iv
Because of the longer duration of action and more uniform plasma concentration. I don't use it but, at the right dose, I think it's a great idea for any inpatient that would need long-acting opiates post-op anyway.if you don't have an IV...
i have some older partners who still do IM opiates for tonsils. in my mind there is no rationale for it - you have an IV - why risk an injection site reaction and a sore muscle?
Are you serious?sore muscle, possible hematoma, unpredictable onset and offset and potency with site and size variability. and the general idea of this does not make sense and is unnecessary, if you just dose your iv opiate correctly you can have someone narcd out on residual fentanyl/dilaudid for a couple of hours if that's your goal for whatever reason
yup, sounds like a stupid idea to this pain fellowship trained anesthesiologistAre you serious?
What would you think about IM ketamine? I am a big proponent of K and think it is underutilized. I use very very small IV doses, but haven't considered small IM doses.yup, sounds like a stupid idea to this pain fellowship trained anesthesiologist
I don't see what a pain fellowship adds to basic OR management otoh if you are removed from the OR i can understand why you don't get this approach.yup, sounds like a stupid idea to this pain fellowship trained anesthesiologist
yup, sounds like a stupid idea to this pain fellowship trained anesthesiologist
What would you think about IM ketamine? I am a big proponent of K and think it is underutilized. I use very very small IV doses, but haven't considered small IM doses.
Because of the longer duration of action and more uniform plasma concentration. I don't use it but, at the right dose, I think it's a great idea for any inpatient that would need long-acting opiates post-op anyway.
I would also expect less nausea (especially for morphine), because the peak plasma concentration is much lower.
Because I do mostly outpatient procedures where I can't experiment with stuff that could delay discharge.if it's such a great idea why don't you (and most anesthesiologists) do it?