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Residency programs appropriately spend alotta time indwelling into budding anesthesiologists the value of preoperative assessment of the patient and subsequent arrival at an anesthetic plan for the case.
In other words we see the patient before the operation, assess them physically and historically, and arrive at a plan.
I've written this very eloquently so I can deliver a point. This verbose style makes me uncomfortable so I'll translate what I really said for individuals like me who would rather see the above prose communicated as
Dudes, we see patients before an operation so we can size'em up, see what we're dealing with, and figure out what we're gonna do on
GAME DAY.
Regardless of which vernacular you're drawn to, both deliver the same message which is
current day anesthesiologists evaluate patients before a surgical intervention, then decide on an anesthetic
PLAN
which of course is carried out when the surgery occurs.
UNFORTUNATELY THE SCIENCE OF MEDICINE IS NOT PERFECT.
SOMETIMES IT IS NECESSARY TO CHANGE YOUR PLAN.
And that's ok, by the way. To change your plan. But we'll get back to that later.
I reflect on my residency training. I had many great attendings. A few though were, uhhhhhhhh,
not good.
I noticed a common trait among my
BOTTOM FEEDER STRUGGLING ATTENDINGS when I was a resident.
Namely, their
LACK OF ABILITY TO CHANGE COURSE.
We'd have an anesthetic plan. Me the resident working with
Bottom Feeder Attending. Here's an example.
Easy case, knee scope. Patient has moderate to severe asthma. Preoperative assessment done. Plan spinal. (I don't advocate this current day btw...just reflecting)
Beautiful.
I get to work, being my great resident self, look at the schedule. Ok I gotta spinal for a knee scope with asthma and I'm still living out all academic dogmas dictated by my attendings some of which should be Taco Bell managers but you know ******* it I'm rollin',
set up, blah blah blah,
attempt spinal.
I can't make it happen. I'm a CA-1 so a CA-2 comes in. Can't get it. So the attending steps in. Can't get it. So the attending calls ANOTHER attending. Can't get it.
Eventually we put the dude to sleep.
I WANT YOU TO LOOK WITH A CRITICAL EYE AT THE CASE ABOVE.
Yeah, it's a residency program so
a little leeway there but
this case points out a very important concept for budding anesthesiologists reading this.....which is....
DUDE...YOU HAD THIS PLAN. YOU INSTITUTED IT. IT DIDN'T WORK. IT'S OK TO
CHANGE
YOUR PLAN.
REALLY. YEARD ME??????
IT'S OK.
You're the attending watching a cuppla fumbling residents. No big deal. Ok, time for you to step in. You try, you can't get it. At this point you can prolong the misery or you can
CHANGE COURSE FROM THE INITIAL PLAN
and take care of business.
Many clinicians arrive at a plan and when said plan is unsuccessful they lack foresight which is revealing to them "uhhhhh dude you need to change course" but since they have a plan,
HELL OR HIGH WATER THEY'RE GONNA INSTITUTE
THE PLAN.
I'm here to tell you, budding clinical studs,
NO.
Not in this business.
IT'S OK...ACTUALLY SOMETIMES IT'S
BETTER
to change plans.
I'll give you a case from today.
46 y/o healthy dude for a shoulder scope.
We perform preoperative ultrasound guided interscalene blocks prior to surgery which dramatically reduces general anesthesia requirement and provides superior post operative pain relief to the point that NO opioids are required during the case or after the case.
We typically do these cases like...block done in pre-op. Bring'em back to the OR, monitors on, pre O2, push a stick of propofol, put an LMA in, crack some sevoflurane, use the BIS to guide volatile anesthetic administration. Case concluding, turn sevoflurane down commensurate to surgical stimulation and BIS reading, case finishes, pull out LMA, go to PACU,
patient going home in 30 minutes. Numb shoulder. Minimal general anesthesia insult. No opioids given/required.
Buh bye!
Another happy patient.
That's how we roll...
mosta the time. Unfortunately sometimes you have to change your plan.
The 46 year old dude I did today had a great interscalene block. We bring him back into the OR, monitors on, pre O2. Push a stick of propofol. LMA rolls in smoothly,
albeit initially.
Then, even under anesthesia, dude starts to do some weird s h it.
Sevo is on 5...he's breathing thru the LMA but his arms are still moving...no prob, its still early, sevo up to max, give a little opioid, actions taken in an attempt to achieve a comfortable anesthetic plane...keep in mind we just put him to sleep...we still haffta position...
Out of nowhere peak inspiratory pressures go up, I place my hand on the bag to assess respiration, cuppla squeezes, it's
TIGHT MAN.
READ:
I AM NOW IN THE OPERATING ROOM, STRUGGLING WITH MY PLAN FOR THIS CASE, AND THE %^CKING CASE HASN'T EVEN STARTED YET LOL
I've got 2 choices here.
I can
CONTINUE TO TRY AND MAKE "MY PLAN" WORK, which isn't working right now or i can
CHANGE COURSE, ADMIT TO MY SELF IN THE MOMENT MY PRE ANESTHETIC PLAN FAILED,
and move on.
I chose B.
Realizing that struggling with an LMA during induction and before surgery starts IS A BAD SIGN,
I
changed course, gave some more propofol followed by 140mg succinylcholine, and
INTUBATED THE DUDE.
This wasn't in my plan, yet within about a sixty second window I realized my plan...my coveted plan I had decided upon before we started and sounded GREAT
wasn't gonna work.
I chose to
CHANGE COURSE, RATHER THAN FORCE A PLAN THAT HASN'T WORKED BUT GOD DA M MIT THATS THE PLAN SO WE'RE GONNA MAKE IT WORK, as represented by my
Bottom Feeder Attendings
when I was a resident.
WHICH GROUP ARE YOU IN???
Are you gonna force your "PLAN", no matter what?
I HATE TO BE JUDGMENTAL BUT IN THIS CASE, DUDE, YA GOTTA MAKE THE CALL
or
GO INTO PSYCHIATRY.
It's ok to
CHANGE YOUR PLAN WHEN THE CHIPS ARE DOWN.
In other words we see the patient before the operation, assess them physically and historically, and arrive at a plan.
I've written this very eloquently so I can deliver a point. This verbose style makes me uncomfortable so I'll translate what I really said for individuals like me who would rather see the above prose communicated as
Dudes, we see patients before an operation so we can size'em up, see what we're dealing with, and figure out what we're gonna do on
GAME DAY.
Regardless of which vernacular you're drawn to, both deliver the same message which is
current day anesthesiologists evaluate patients before a surgical intervention, then decide on an anesthetic
PLAN
which of course is carried out when the surgery occurs.
UNFORTUNATELY THE SCIENCE OF MEDICINE IS NOT PERFECT.
SOMETIMES IT IS NECESSARY TO CHANGE YOUR PLAN.
And that's ok, by the way. To change your plan. But we'll get back to that later.
I reflect on my residency training. I had many great attendings. A few though were, uhhhhhhhh,
not good.
I noticed a common trait among my
BOTTOM FEEDER STRUGGLING ATTENDINGS when I was a resident.
Namely, their
LACK OF ABILITY TO CHANGE COURSE.
We'd have an anesthetic plan. Me the resident working with
Bottom Feeder Attending. Here's an example.
Easy case, knee scope. Patient has moderate to severe asthma. Preoperative assessment done. Plan spinal. (I don't advocate this current day btw...just reflecting)
Beautiful.
I get to work, being my great resident self, look at the schedule. Ok I gotta spinal for a knee scope with asthma and I'm still living out all academic dogmas dictated by my attendings some of which should be Taco Bell managers but you know ******* it I'm rollin',
set up, blah blah blah,
attempt spinal.
I can't make it happen. I'm a CA-1 so a CA-2 comes in. Can't get it. So the attending steps in. Can't get it. So the attending calls ANOTHER attending. Can't get it.
Eventually we put the dude to sleep.
I WANT YOU TO LOOK WITH A CRITICAL EYE AT THE CASE ABOVE.
Yeah, it's a residency program so
a little leeway there but
this case points out a very important concept for budding anesthesiologists reading this.....which is....
DUDE...YOU HAD THIS PLAN. YOU INSTITUTED IT. IT DIDN'T WORK. IT'S OK TO
CHANGE
YOUR PLAN.
REALLY. YEARD ME??????
IT'S OK.
You're the attending watching a cuppla fumbling residents. No big deal. Ok, time for you to step in. You try, you can't get it. At this point you can prolong the misery or you can
CHANGE COURSE FROM THE INITIAL PLAN
and take care of business.
Many clinicians arrive at a plan and when said plan is unsuccessful they lack foresight which is revealing to them "uhhhhh dude you need to change course" but since they have a plan,
HELL OR HIGH WATER THEY'RE GONNA INSTITUTE
THE PLAN.
I'm here to tell you, budding clinical studs,
NO.
Not in this business.
IT'S OK...ACTUALLY SOMETIMES IT'S
BETTER
to change plans.
I'll give you a case from today.
46 y/o healthy dude for a shoulder scope.
We perform preoperative ultrasound guided interscalene blocks prior to surgery which dramatically reduces general anesthesia requirement and provides superior post operative pain relief to the point that NO opioids are required during the case or after the case.
We typically do these cases like...block done in pre-op. Bring'em back to the OR, monitors on, pre O2, push a stick of propofol, put an LMA in, crack some sevoflurane, use the BIS to guide volatile anesthetic administration. Case concluding, turn sevoflurane down commensurate to surgical stimulation and BIS reading, case finishes, pull out LMA, go to PACU,
patient going home in 30 minutes. Numb shoulder. Minimal general anesthesia insult. No opioids given/required.
Buh bye!
Another happy patient.
That's how we roll...
mosta the time. Unfortunately sometimes you have to change your plan.
The 46 year old dude I did today had a great interscalene block. We bring him back into the OR, monitors on, pre O2. Push a stick of propofol. LMA rolls in smoothly,
albeit initially.
Then, even under anesthesia, dude starts to do some weird s h it.
Sevo is on 5...he's breathing thru the LMA but his arms are still moving...no prob, its still early, sevo up to max, give a little opioid, actions taken in an attempt to achieve a comfortable anesthetic plane...keep in mind we just put him to sleep...we still haffta position...
Out of nowhere peak inspiratory pressures go up, I place my hand on the bag to assess respiration, cuppla squeezes, it's
TIGHT MAN.
READ:
I AM NOW IN THE OPERATING ROOM, STRUGGLING WITH MY PLAN FOR THIS CASE, AND THE %^CKING CASE HASN'T EVEN STARTED YET LOL
I've got 2 choices here.
I can
CONTINUE TO TRY AND MAKE "MY PLAN" WORK, which isn't working right now or i can
CHANGE COURSE, ADMIT TO MY SELF IN THE MOMENT MY PRE ANESTHETIC PLAN FAILED,
and move on.
I chose B.
Realizing that struggling with an LMA during induction and before surgery starts IS A BAD SIGN,
I
changed course, gave some more propofol followed by 140mg succinylcholine, and
INTUBATED THE DUDE.
This wasn't in my plan, yet within about a sixty second window I realized my plan...my coveted plan I had decided upon before we started and sounded GREAT
wasn't gonna work.
I chose to
CHANGE COURSE, RATHER THAN FORCE A PLAN THAT HASN'T WORKED BUT GOD DA M MIT THATS THE PLAN SO WE'RE GONNA MAKE IT WORK, as represented by my
Bottom Feeder Attendings
when I was a resident.
WHICH GROUP ARE YOU IN???
Are you gonna force your "PLAN", no matter what?
I HATE TO BE JUDGMENTAL BUT IN THIS CASE, DUDE, YA GOTTA MAKE THE CALL
or
GO INTO PSYCHIATRY.
It's ok to
CHANGE YOUR PLAN WHEN THE CHIPS ARE DOWN.
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