What do you guys think about replacing K+, 10 mEq per hour X 2 AC peripheral IV's for a total of 20 mEq per/hr for those with critically low K+ (can't go PO)? In those situations where a central line isn't necessary/possible.
What's the fastest potassium you have put in through a central line?
HH
Great. Thanks, Hernandez.
Any idea where this came from? Is it based on any studies?
Are there a bunch of dead people or study animals after giving more?
Of course, assuming the potassium is 1.8 (pretty damn low), even 100/hr would be pretty helpful.
HH
Can count them on one hand with no fingers....Define critically low. And if it is critically low, a cental line is necessary, I can count on one hand the times I couldn't central venous access in someone.
Can count them on one hand with no fingers....
Agree. Critically low K gets a CVC, 40-60meq IV over an hour and I give another 60meq po in the first hour if possible. Low k kills people. They are by definition sick enough to get a line.
Of shoot question.... Do you put lines in your DKA pts who are very acidotic but ventilating well and hemodynamicly stable? I have found if I have to wait on my lab for q2h or even sometimes q4h bumps, they take atleast an extra 90 minutes. If I out in a linens nurses will draw the labs themselves and they will get sent q2h down to the minute. Turn around still slow but atleast they're drawn and in the lab.
Lets not get cocky now....
Lets not get cocky now....

Can count them on one hand with no fingers....
Agree. Critically low K gets a CVC, 40-60meq IV over an hour and I give another 60meq po in the first hour if possible. Low k kills people. They are by definition sick enough to get a line.
Of shoot question.... Do you put lines in your DKA pts who are very acidotic but ventilating well and hemodynamicly stable? I have found if I have to wait on my lab techs to draw q2h or even sometimes q4h bmps, they take atleast an extra 90 minutes beyond what I order. If I put in a line he nurses will draw the labs themselves and they will get sent q2h down to the minute. Turn around still slow but atleast they're drawn and in the lab. Hard to titrate insulin and make drip changes when I'm getting me labs much later than needed. And any finger stick > 500 here has to be verified with venous draw as > 500 could be 501 or 1100, which then takes another hour. So I put lines in a lot of these pts.
Heh I figure that would draw you out for a rebuttals comment 😛That just means he hasn't done enough.......
Define acidotic.....and how low is their PaCO2? Usually no, 98% if DKA can be managed without q2 labs, even the real sick ones I probably don't do more than q4 lytes. If your glucometers are reliable over 500 and you'd need q1 blood sugars, sure, most of the units I've been in would go up to 700ish before verifying as long as the numbers made sense based off previous lytes, but yes, frequent lab draw (which I define as q6 or more frequent) gets a line most of the time
Heh I figure that would draw you out for a rebuttals comment 😛
And I agree I usually write q4 lytes. But even then q4 becomes q5.5 with my lab. And my glucometers peak at 500 so from the 900 or so they came in at until they are <500 the bedside finger sticks don't immediately help me. But you answered what I was getting at. Frequent labs results in a line. I do this for my bad ards pts and such who I know will get multiple abgs daily for several days. Without the art line all the bag sticks turns there wrists into hamburger.
Heh I figure that would draw you out for a rebuttals comment 😛
And I agree I usually write q4 lytes. But even then q4 becomes q5.5 with my lab. And my glucometers peak at 500 so from the 900 or so they came in at until they are <500 the bedside finger sticks don't immediately help me. But you answered what I was getting at. Frequent labs results in a line. I do this for my bad ards pts and such who I know will get multiple abgs daily for several days. Without the art line all the bag sticks turns there wrists into hamburger.
Probably not but it's part of our units vent protocol. They get daily chest X-rays and abgs. A lot are not necessary, but they're not my rules. But yes a vbg and pulse lx are probably sufficient though I don't have much experience with this yetDo you really need an ABG daily if you have EtCO2 and a pulse ox? Unless they're hemodynamically unstable, I don't put in a-lines for frequent ABGs, I just don't do. ABGs, I'll use a vbg with pulse ox and periodic ABGs if I don't believe the other data.
Probably not but it's part of our units vent protocol. They get daily chest X-rays and abgs. A lot are not necessary, but they're not my rules. But yes a vbg and pulse lx are probably sufficient though I don't have much experience with this yet
i put an a-line in patients with DKA so labs can be drawn and it avoids a central line. I don't care about the pa02 or the CO2 usually,
We do 10/hr peripheral and 20/central. I guess it depends on how low the level is, but I don't know about running in any more than 40/hr otherwise (that's the most i've seen in my setting). Also, with a questionable level, we will obviously redo the level and run in a 20meq bag in the meantime. Its hard to determine exactly how pts. will react...esp our renal pts. When I'm asked to replete in this scenario I usually give them a run and redraw a level 2hrs post infusion. I'm also a pharmacist, so my perspective might be different lol.What do you guys think about replacing K+, 10 mEq per hour X 2 AC peripheral IV's for a total of 20 mEq per/hr for those with critically low K+ (can't go PO)? In those situations where a central line isn't necessary/possible.
What do you guys think about replacing K+, 10 mEq per hour X 2 AC peripheral IV's for a total of 20 mEq per/hr for those with critically low K+ (can't go PO)? In those situations where a central line isn't necessary/possible.
Hypokalemia will kill people and I know not fixing it aggressively enough will result in mortality. Most ICU pharmacists get that and leave me be though 80 is the most through CVL at once I have ever done and was a bit nervous w that one.
edit: i just cant see the utility in giving 80meq/hour to the non-arresting patient. anyone else do this? educate me
okay so technically 80meq/hour is the same thing as 80meq in an hour, i get that you wouldnt continue to give that much every hour. also, i would argue that someone in torsades qualifies as "arresting"