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It's like YODA said:
DO or DO NOT
THERE IS NO TRY
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nice. la la love it.
It's like YODA said:
DO or DO NOT
THERE IS NO TRY
![]()
!
I still don't know the right answer to the ventilate or not question with the succ on every patient. I was taught both by different attendings that trained on different sides of the pond. The right answer depends on who you ask.
If you are worried about potentially not being able to ventilate or intubate the patient, is it better to give yourself the best shot ASAP or is it better to hope that the induction propofol wears off more quickly to allow spontaneously ventilation than the combination of propofol and succinylcholine? I don't know the answer. I've heard fairly convincing arguments both ways.
On the one hand, I'm never sure if being able to ventilate before the succinylcholine hits means I can ventilate after it hits. If that is the case, I'd sure wish I had given it right away so it can wear off faster. I'd also like the longest duration of good intubating conditions so the faster the succinycholine is in, the longer I can attempt intubation until the sat starts dropping. Essentially I'll get more tries at it. If I can't ventilate or intubate, I need to make sure I've got everything up to a cric kit in the room.
On the other hand, the safety margin with the induction is the time from apnea until the return of spontaneous ventilation. If I just give propofol, the time to return to spontaneous ventilation cannot be longer than the combination of the prop + succ. It could potentially be the same amount of time, but in all likelihood it's probably sooner.
But the question is, if you can't ventilate after the propofol, what do you do? If a DL is involved at any point (after trying with oral/nasal airway or LMA), you are better off with the succ already working.
I tend to just push the succ. If I'm that worried about the potential combination of extremely difficult intubation/ventilation I never go down this pathway in the first place. They are either getting an awake FOI or they are still spontaneously breathing from my induction with some combination of sevo/nitrous/ketamine etc. I'm not burning the bridge if I am not reasonably certain we can secure the airway.
You can always wake the patient up. You should never forget this. As impractical as it sounds (and I truly believe it applies more towards CANNOT intubate, CAN ventilate situations), its still in the algorithm. If you give paralytic and you cannot ventilate, then you are quickly traversing the algorithm, hoping an LMA seats nicely. Otherwise they have a hole in their neck. The healthiest person is not likely to do well with a slug of prop/sux if all of a sudden you cant V/I, and thats what sticks in my mind.
WIth my N of 2000 or so, Ive yet to see a patient that I could ventilate before paralytic that I couldnt ventilate after paralytic.
Also, this discussion is completely separate from the anticipated difficult mask/intubation. This is just routine run of the mill patients with no obvious risk factors.
Agree. But if I give a slug of propofol and immediately push the succ, I can still wake the patient up. Time to significant desat on a young healthy adult with perfect preoxygenation is over 10 minutes. The succ is long gone by then.
That's my point. The time to meaningful spontaneous ventilation after induction dose of propofol is not that different than after a dose of propofol immediately followed by succinylcholine. In some patients at some doses, the time is identical (in other words, the rate limiting step is the propofol)..
Agree. But if I give a slug of propofol and immediately push the succ, I can still wake the patient up. Time to significant desat on a young healthy adult with perfect preoxygenation is over 10 minutes. The succ is long gone by then.