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I think you have answered that one.
i think my reason trumps his reason
I think you have answered that one.
i think my reason trumps his reason
if the kid bleeds when he gags and coughs you wanna know in the OR
This is why we wake the kid up in the OR - we call it the RED test. If he is going to bleed, let's find out now. I know this doesn't exclude the 5-7 day bleed when the scar falls off, but as you all know, tonsills rebleed after the case, and in a week. At least this eliminates one of those.
Hey Private practice guys,
So do any of you guys have any secrets to rapid turn-over of T & A's?
We used to let our PACU nurses extubate adults, but NEVER kids.I have a wonderful secret. Get your PACU trained in extubation and take all your kiddos intubated to the PACU. Turnover is very fast, and that means more start up units for you!
This is why we wake the kid up in the OR - we call it the RED test. If he is going to bleed, let's find out now. I know this doesn't exclude the 5-7 day bleed when the scar falls off, but as you all know, tonsills rebleed after the case, and in a week. At least this eliminates one of those.
Just curious, how many of these red tests came back positive at your institution?
I have not had one since residency. I have seen 1 at 8hrs post op and another at 2 days postop. The rest have been in the 5-7 days window.
By the way both of those early bleeds were red headed females.
Anyone care for some data? This is from Anesthesiology or A&A in 1991. The citation fell off somehow. Awake extubation did not have fewer airway related complications in this study of 70 kids. There are many papers that support this and none (that I found) that refute it. Sorry Johan.
Emergence airway complications in children: a comparison of tracheal extubation in awake and deeply anesthetized patients.Patel RI, Hannallah RS, Norden J, Casey WF, Verghese ST.
Department of Anesthesiology, Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC 20010.
We compared the differences in oxygen saturation and airway-related complications after tracheal extubation in pediatric patients undergoing elective strabismus surgery or adenoidectomy and/or tonsillectomy who were awake versus anesthetized. Seventy otherwise healthy patients between 2 and 8 yr of age were studied. Anesthesia was induced with halothane or thiamylal and maintained with nitrous oxide and halothane. After induction of anesthesia, the patients were randomly assigned to group 1 (awake extubation) or group 2 (anesthetized extubation). Oxygen saturation was measured continuously and recorded 10 min before extubation and at 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 min after tracheal extubation. Supplemental oxygen was administered when oxygen saturation values were less than 90% while breathing room air. Oxygen saturation levels were higher in group 2 than in group 1 at 1, 2, 3, and 5 min after extubation. There were no differences between the two groups in the number of patients requiring supplemental oxygen. The incidence of airway-related complications such as laryngospasm, croup, sore throat, excessive coughing, and arrhythmias was not different between the two groups. We conclude that the anesthesiologist's preference or surgical requirements may dictate the choice of extubation technique in otherwise healthy children undergoing elective surgery.
Almost every T&A at Children's Hosp in San diego is extubated awake in PACU by nurses. Makes for very fast turnover.
Just curious, how many of these red tests came back positive at your institution?
I have not had one since residency. I have seen 1 at 8hrs post op and another at 2 days postop. The rest have been in the 5-7 days window.
By the way both of those early bleeds were red headed females.
Good question. I don't really know, but I am pretty sure that not many have a postitive test. I have seen one. To tell you the truth, I doubt it does much to really prevent seeing a re-bleed in the PACU or a few hours later, as you mention.