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I honestly don't know what forum this question belongs in, so I'll ask it here. Forgive me if this is the wrong place.
I've been hearing a lot about propofol overdoses recently, including in some in clinical settings. As a (hopeful) future anesthesiologist, this both frightens and confuses me. Perhaps you guys can help set me straight.
Propofol is an anesthetic only, right? I know it has largely replaced barbiturates, and that it can cause respiratory arrest in high doses.
But can it kill on its own?
Or is death the result of respiratory arrest?
If a patient is being monitored correctly (pulse ox and 3-lead EKG minimum), and there is an ambu bag nearby, is there any excuse for a patient dying of propofol overdose?
Thanks for the help.
I've been hearing a lot about propofol overdoses recently, including in some in clinical settings. As a (hopeful) future anesthesiologist, this both frightens and confuses me. Perhaps you guys can help set me straight.
Propofol is an anesthetic only, right? I know it has largely replaced barbiturates, and that it can cause respiratory arrest in high doses.
But can it kill on its own?
Or is death the result of respiratory arrest?
If a patient is being monitored correctly (pulse ox and 3-lead EKG minimum), and there is an ambu bag nearby, is there any excuse for a patient dying of propofol overdose?
Thanks for the help.