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- Aug 5, 2007
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Okay, so I get into an argument yesterday with an attending (imagine that). This attending wants to avoid propofol in a 15-month-old who has an egg allergy.
I say, "There's no egg in propofol." I've run into this scenario before a while back and gave propofol with no problems.
Then, this attending says (basically), "You are stupid. You need to do more reading. Of course there's egg in propofol." We're off site and the attending wants to use ketamine and a whole host of other meds to keep this kid sedated while this minor procedure is done. Kid is going home immediately afterwards.
I look it up. I'm wrong. There's egg lecithin in Diprivan that is extracted from the yolk. I was pretty sure that there wasn't any in generic propofol, but I'm big enough to admit that there is and I was mistaken. It's there as a cheap, easy to obtain source of phosphatidylcholine.
So, what's the right answer? What would you do? Use propofol in a kid with an egg allergy or not? I'll tell you what we ended up doing later.
-copro
I say, "There's no egg in propofol." I've run into this scenario before a while back and gave propofol with no problems.
Then, this attending says (basically), "You are stupid. You need to do more reading. Of course there's egg in propofol." We're off site and the attending wants to use ketamine and a whole host of other meds to keep this kid sedated while this minor procedure is done. Kid is going home immediately afterwards.
I look it up. I'm wrong. There's egg lecithin in Diprivan that is extracted from the yolk. I was pretty sure that there wasn't any in generic propofol, but I'm big enough to admit that there is and I was mistaken. It's there as a cheap, easy to obtain source of phosphatidylcholine.
So, what's the right answer? What would you do? Use propofol in a kid with an egg allergy or not? I'll tell you what we ended up doing later.
-copro