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We've all been there. Section, baby is out, OB is closing. Patient is wrenching. Any tips in your regimen, prophylactic antiemetics, etc?
Prophylactic phenylephrine.
We've all been there. Section, baby is out, OB is closing. Patient is wrenching. Any tips in your regimen, prophylactic antiemetics, etc?
If that didn't work, I gave dad a pair of gloves and an emesis basin. It is partially his fault for impregnating her in the first place.
for my c-sections I do this:
Just curious, and maybe I missed this.. what's the reasoning for waiting on the odansetron till the baby's out?
We've all been there. Section, baby is out, OB is closing. Patient is wrenching. Any tips in your regimen, prophylactic antiemetics, etc?
Yesterday I put 2mg EPI from the spinal tray in the liter of fluid and ran it almost wide open. Worked well. Thought I would use it since I always throw those vials away. Maybe I will keep trying this.
That's a sh*tload of epi to be giving routinely.
Nah, you just slow or stop the drip. Don't overthink it. It's easy. About 500 mcg of phenylephrine in the IV bag works great. Completely smooth, flat train-track vitals, no nausea. HR doesn't bounce between 70 and 100 as the phenylephrine boluses peak and trough. It's easy. It just works ... and there's not so much of it in the bag that anyone ever gets hypertensive.I would never squirt an amp or two of pressor-du-jour of any type in the IV bag. What happens when the pressure normalizes? Ya gotta toss the bag and hang an uncontaminated fluid.
Totally disagree. You don't "need" a drip of about 50 mcg/min any more than you "need" boluses of 100 mcg every two minutes. A "pressor drip" isn't just for patients in extremis. It's a smooth elegant way to deliver smaller amounds of a drug that has a rapid onset and short half-life ... like phenylephrine. Putting it on a pump and programming it is a hassle. Squirting it in the IV bag and thumbing the wheel thingy is easy.If you need a pressor drip, you need more fluid on board.
Nah, you just slow or stop the drip. Don't overthink it. It's easy. About 500 mcg of phenylephrine in the IV bag works great. Completely smooth, flat train-track vitals, no nausea. HR doesn't bounce between 70 and 100 as the phenylephrine boluses peak and trough. It's easy. It just works ... and there's not so much of it in the bag that anyone ever gets hypertensive.
Totally disagree. You don't "need" a drip of about 50 mcg/min any more than you "need" boluses of 100 mcg every two minutes. A "pressor drip" isn't just for patients in extremis. It's a smooth elegant way to deliver smaller amounds of a drug that has a rapid onset and short half-life ... like phenylephrine. Putting it on a pump and programming it is a hassle. Squirting it in the IV bag and thumbing the wheel thingy is easy.
Credit to Noyac for the idea, way back when.I LIKE IT!!!!
Credit to Noyac for the idea, way back when.
Credit to Noyac for the idea, way back when.
The OP ain't talking about nausea and retching from hypotension. This is at the end of the case when vitals have pretty much stabilized out.
At this point of the case, the nausea is caused by stimulation of the visceral peritoneum, either through washing or traction, or a hand mucking around in the belly. The spinal has started to wear off at it's highest and weakest level, and the signals from the visceral peritoneum are getting through to the brain.
If your block is perfect (4th and 5th fingers numb bilaterally at the start of the case) or slightly higher than perfect then you won't get the nausea at this point unless the OB's have taken a super long time.
0.1 mg epi will help prolong the upper segments of the block and reduce the incidence of nausea from peritoneal stimulation at the end of the case.
- pod
When I was a resident, I'd do CSEs for the repeat sections in large patients, because the full vial of bupivacaine wouldn't last long enough, even with an epi wash.Good god how long are your OBs taking to do their sections? I've never seen this in private practice. Even on the beached whales.
When I was a resident, I'd do CSEs for the repeat sections in large patients, because the full vial of bupivacaine wouldn't last long enough, even with an epi wash.
Now, I have the opposite problem - minimizing the bupivacaine dose because the case is done in 20 minutes, but still having enough there to get a reliable block (fentanyl's the key there).