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- Attending Physician
16y/o healthy male comes in at 8pm with a broken wrist he ate at 7pm it's now 11pm. Ortho on call is the hand guy so it's going to be a 30-40min case tops.
What's your approach?
RSI, LMA, regional US or NS, postpone how long?
16y/o healthy male comes in at 8pm with a broken wrist he ate at 7pm it's now 11pm. Ortho on call is the hand guy so it's going to be a 30-40min case tops.
What's your approach?
RSI, LMA, regional US or NS, postpone how long?
As a board question I am not quite sure, since those NPO guidelines are very far from being clear-cut.
NPO guidelines are just that, guidelines. They are subject to interpretation.
I still would do pent, sux, tube.
If ortho dude posts the case as urgent I am not going to argue with him unless there is a compelling reason to do so, which is unlikely with this pt. You could have the case done by the time you are finished arguing.
I absolutely agree and that's what we all do all the time. But since I am still before my orals, I always keep in mind the ways to answer the question as for orals( they do not coincide 100% and you know that).
My best advice for the orals: just do what you normally would. The examiners (for the most part) are not out to fry you. If you try and play mind games you run the risk of being hosed.
pent, sux, tube
Nice story. 👍did an almost the same case 4 hours ago. His fracture as a distal humorous. He had just had a late lunch 2 hrs before he hurt himself slipping on the ice outside his parents house walking the dog. He even went as far as to say that he felt full. I spoke with the ortho on call and he didn't care what we did as long as he could get out and get some sleep cause he was leaving to go ski early in the morning. I spoke with the kid and he felt he could tolerate sitting still as lomng as he had something to do. I did a supraclavicular block and an intercostal brachial sans sedation and let him bring his iphone into the or. We watched some epidodes of the office he downloaded and hung out. In my opinion this was the best care he could have gotten and no matter what a board examiner says it worked. I agree that regional is sometimes not the best answer cause they will throw the failed block at you, or the uncomfortable in there that needs to go to sleep. The one thing that you never have in an exam is the feeling the patient gives you whe you meet face to face that will let you know what they can handle. blaz.
Well i went for the regional too: US guided axillary block. He wasn't the most cooperative patient but once his arm went numb and with a little midaz he tolerated the surgery fine.
The case wasn't an emergency so it could have been delayed but the hand guy was ready to go. I felt the most comfortable option for the patient was to have his wrist fixed earlier rather than the next day or the day after, to avoid airway problems and have a good post-op analgesia.
Incidence of aspiration or intravascular injection are very low but whatever your approach you can always be faulted if you have a bad outcome.
I LOVE the u/s guided axillary