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Saw a bunch of you recommend UBP for oral board so i decided to take a look... yet the first stem they gave i already have some questions about either the book or my ability to practice anesthesia. Is the oral board really expecting me to give answers like this?
stem: super morbid obese 5'7 180kg. 22 yr old in vehicle trauma gcs 9, with signs of basilar fracture, facial fracutre, multiple loose teeth, tachy 130s, bp 170s, sat 96% on non rebreather, 33C temp.
Q: Patient becoming more combative, how would you intubate.
I thought i would just say something like induce propofol, succ. and intubate with video laryngoscope with C collar in place or remove and apply manual inline stabilization, with difficult airway/trach equipment on standby.
UBP response.: awake intubation unlikely to succeed due to trauma and combative patient. thus, have difficult airway equipment, including trach set, surgeon at bedside and ready to perform trach, sit patient at 30 degrees to facilitate intubation and improve ventilation/decrease regurgitation, titrate ketamine to maintain spontaneous respiration, remove C collar, maintain manual inline stabilization and apply cricoid pressure, then perform laryngscopy.
Is this the type of answers we are supposed to give on the boards? do you think i would have failed with my response of paralyzing with sux in this obese patient with trauma?
Also do you also intubate at 30 degrees? I sometimes do so for preoxygenation but i usually lay them flat for intubation.. isnt it harder to intubate at 30 degrees than supine? and although it may decrease risk of regurg food contents up, if it does it has increased risk of aspiration..
stem: super morbid obese 5'7 180kg. 22 yr old in vehicle trauma gcs 9, with signs of basilar fracture, facial fracutre, multiple loose teeth, tachy 130s, bp 170s, sat 96% on non rebreather, 33C temp.
Q: Patient becoming more combative, how would you intubate.
I thought i would just say something like induce propofol, succ. and intubate with video laryngoscope with C collar in place or remove and apply manual inline stabilization, with difficult airway/trach equipment on standby.
UBP response.: awake intubation unlikely to succeed due to trauma and combative patient. thus, have difficult airway equipment, including trach set, surgeon at bedside and ready to perform trach, sit patient at 30 degrees to facilitate intubation and improve ventilation/decrease regurgitation, titrate ketamine to maintain spontaneous respiration, remove C collar, maintain manual inline stabilization and apply cricoid pressure, then perform laryngscopy.
Is this the type of answers we are supposed to give on the boards? do you think i would have failed with my response of paralyzing with sux in this obese patient with trauma?
Also do you also intubate at 30 degrees? I sometimes do so for preoxygenation but i usually lay them flat for intubation.. isnt it harder to intubate at 30 degrees than supine? and although it may decrease risk of regurg food contents up, if it does it has increased risk of aspiration..
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