- Joined
- Mar 4, 2003
- Messages
- 66
- Reaction score
- 0
I have never done one like that...
It seems that CXR will always come first....
It seems that CXR will always come first....
I have never done one like that...
It seems that CXR will always come first....
How about needle decompression in the field? Has anyone done that? Or what's the most invasive procedure you've done outside the or/trauma bay?
I have never done one like that...
It seems that CXR will always come first....
Must agree with the caveat... I do not concern myself with breath sounds present, absent, or quality of... I can rarely hear very much in a noisy trauma room. If they got the mechanism and additional clinical signs I tube them....You'll run into this situation in the trauma bay relatively often. If the patient has a mechanism for it, and presents with hypotension, respiratory distress, and decreased or absent breath sounds, I'm putting the chest tube in immediately...
Agree.... unless the tube is "elective" because you find pathology incidentally/after a procedure.......As others have noted, you have mechanisms and signs and symptoms - tube first and questions [later].
My only indication for needle decompression is the absence of a knife and tube.... I can evacuate and/or decompress the chest far quicker with a knife then a needle. That is obviously not the same situation a paramedic would find themselves in....How about needle decompression...
That's a slow Monday morning tube........you can put in a chest tube in 1-2 minutes?...
I've actually seen a CT of a tension pneumo....Tension PTX is a clinical dx. If you get a CXR, you are already behind the 8 ball.
Probably opening the chest in the SICU as a PGY-2 for a post-CABG who popped off a graft. I still think I am walking a little funny after that experience.![]()
Sorry, just had to comment on the "walking funny" thing-In India, whenever someone comments about a girl "walking funny", it's (kinda) derogatory as it implies that she has been "doing the nasty".
Probably opening the chest in the SICU as a PGY-2 for a post-CABG who popped off a graft. I still think I am walking a little funny after that experience.![]()
I've actually seen a CT of a tension pneumo....
In their defense, the staff trauma surgeon didn't even pick up on it, because the patient wasn't really having trouble breathing, I guess (I wasn't there - it was presented in trauma conference). He did get short of breath when they put in the chest tube though. He recovered without a problem.
if the patient wasnt having trouble breathing, then it wasnt a tension pneumothorax.
You can have a big pneumo with significant mediastinal shift and no symptoms- that isnt a tension ptx.
but if you want to be a purist- tension pneumothorax is accompanied by hypotension and/or hypoxia.
but if you want to be a purist- tension pneumothorax is accompanied by hypotension.
clarification.... should NEVER diagnose it by CXR or CT or etc....I would go so far as to say that tension pneumothorax is DEFINED by hemodynamic compromise. You cannot diagnose it radiographically.
Probably opening the chest in the SICU as a PGY-2 for a post-CABG who popped off a graft. I still think I am walking a little funny after that experience.![]()
I can't speak to WS particular experience... but the situation is usually more about the tamponade created by the spraying graft. You open the sternum and decompress and then get back to OR. You hope there is not too much infarction from the perfusion loss to the target distribution. But, the emergency mandated opening is not the infarction it is the tamponade.What did you do once you cut the wires and got the sternum open?
It depends on the specifics... i.e. where is the leak. If it's on the aorta you can put a finger or even a side biting clamp on it. If it's at the distal where the graft tore free.... just pinch off the vein. The coronary target will likely ooze... but remember it was grafted distal to a significant stenosis....Just curious - once you've got the tamponade released how do you recommend getting some kind of hemostasis while you're being wheeled back to the OR? Seems like direct pressure would be kind of difficult to apply. . .
vancozosyn said:What did you do once you cut the wires and got the sternum open?
It depends on the specifics... i.e. where is the leak. If it's on the aorta you can put a finger or even a side biting clamp on it. If it's at the distal where the graft tore free.... just pinch off the vein. The coronary target will likely ooze... but remember it was grafted distal to a significant stenosis....
so how did you know that the graft had popped off? I'd hate to be the resident that re-opened someone's chest when that wasn't what needed to be done!Yep, yelled at nurse to page attending, cut wires, released tamponade, yelled at nurse to call OR and tell them we're coming, pinched off vein and rode on SICU bed to OR holding the distal graft between my fingers. Fortunately, he didn't infarct too much muscle.
so how did you know that the graft had popped off? I'd hate to be the resident that re-opened someone's chest when that wasn't what needed to be done!