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FOAMfrat Podcast

Summary: Podcast by Tyler Christifulli & Sam Ireland

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Podcasts:

 Podcast 22 - Hypoxemia, Cyanosis, & Weird Plumbing | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:13:02

You have heard me brag about the critical care refresher that Lifestar puts on every two years. This is a clip by Dr. Lorin Browne. He is the Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine at Children's Hospital of Milwaukee. He is also one of the coolest dudes I have had the opportunity to hang out with. In this small clip he discusses why cyanosis will not always be an outward sign of adequate oxygenation. Towards the end of this podcast he refers to a website he uses routinely for staying fresh on congenital heart defects. Here is that link https://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/patients/child/encyclopedia/defects . http://blog.cincinnatichildrens.org/rare-and-complex-conditions/heart-conditions/animated-videos-illustrate-congenital-heart-defects/

 Podcast 21 - Tips For The Occasional Intubator Part 3 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:30

Here it is! The series finale of "Tips For The Occasional Intubator". Tip 5. Video Laryngoscopy It’s no doubt that video laryngoscopy (VL) is sweeping the nation. While there are some resistors, the majority of providers have moved towards utilizing VL for their routine intubations. The VL tool comes in many shapes and sizes, and each one provides a little something different. Hyper-angulated blades allow you to “peak” around the corner with very little displacement of tissue. The standard geometry blade allows you to use the tool like DL, but optimize your view and allow your colleagues to see what you see. For these reasons, I have personally adopted VL into my routine practice. I have seen the success rates of my service DRASTICALY improve with this addition. I have seen some studies that show no difference between DL & VL. My only argument against these studies, is that the services that are cooperating in the study have high exposure to intubations. The question isn’t whether VL is better than DL, but rather are we practiced enough to effectively use DL. Tip 6. Simulation “The mannequin is nothing like the real thing!” This phrase comes out of most student’s mouth as they walk out of the operating room after clinicals. The truth is, they’re right! But, I don’t think the actual procedure of intubating is that difficult, and it’s certainly not the most dangerous. The part that we need to practice is the steps leading up to intubation, and the monitoring afterwards. No one dies from someone missing a tube and recognizing it right away. People die when the heuristics and planning fail to recognize failure. Guess what? This part we can simulate! Students routinely go into the OR and nail an intubation under the proper set up of an anesthesiologist. It’s required to complete clinicals! This right here tells me that we are capable of performing the skill, we just need help with knowing when to do it, and optimizing the conditions we perform it in. So there you have it… Our 6 tips that I have adopted into my occasionally intubating first pass success.

 Podcast 20 - Tips For The Occasional Intubator Part 2 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:14:50

You came back for part two! In this episode Dr. Jeff Jarvis and I discuss his system's technique for pre-oxygenation, and why pre-loading your bougie can help increase your first pass success. Tip 3. NODESAT! “Nasal Oxygen During Efforts To Secure a Tube” (NODESAT) is a term coined by Rich Levitan in regards to placing a nasal cannula at high flow on a patient during the pre-ox and intubation process. This allows not only augmentation of FI02 from a NRB or BVM, but also the ability to provide apneic oxygenation during intubation. The idea is during the pre-ox period you place a NC at 15lpm, a NRB at 15lpm, and try to achieve an SP02 of 100 % for at least 3 minutes prior to intubation. Because this provides little positive pressure, it will likely not work in a patient with physiological shunting. If you HAVE to ventilate a patient due to inadequate peri-intubation ventilation, then the use of CPAP or BVM with a PEEP valve will be needed. By utilizing Henry’s law we can not only increase the surface area of alveoli by recruitment, but also apply pressure to the oxygen to assist in diffusion. Tip 4. Ditch The Stylet! I may be crucified by some for saying this, but statistics and anecdotal experience has shown you are much more likely to achieve first pass success if you utilize a bougie. Now the old way that we were taught to use the bougie required two people to perform. One person would intubate the trachea with the bougie, and the other would assist in railroading an ET tube over the bougie. A more common and efficient trick in the pre-hospital realm, is to preload the bougie with either a Kiwi grip or D grip. The cudae tip allows for easier anterior access, and the tactile feel of the bougie allows you to feel the tracheal rings upon successful placement. The bougie is commonly used as an emergency tool for difficult airways. If we are intubating a patient, it is an emergency, and we need to use everything possible to optimize our FPS. The occasional intubator recognizes the need to utilize every strategy possible to achieve their goal. A study showed providers increased their FPC success rates from 66% to 96% just by utilizing the bougie. This is a must in every pre-hospital airway kit. Sources: Comparison of the stylet and the gum elastic bougie in tracheal intubation in a simulated difficult airway Riaz Ahmed Khan*,Farah Ashraf Khan **, Muhammad Azam*** Anaesthesia, Pain & Intensive Care ISSN 1607-8322, ISSN (Online) 2220-5799

 Podcast 19 - Tips For The Occasional Intubator Part 1 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:20:01

Dr. Jeff Jarvis joins me in this three part series on tips to optimize your first pass success with intubation.... but now just for any one, this podcast is for "The Occasional Intubator". Let’s face it, as Paramedics we don’t walk around every shift throwing tubes down everyone’s throat! We have to realize that this is a skill that has the potential to save someone’s life, but also has the potential to take one. There have been rumblings back and forth on whether medics should be allowed to perform a skill they don’t use frequently. These arguments are backed by scenarios where providers have failed intubation, intubated the goose, and never used any quantifiable markers to validate placement….. and the patient died. Can we honestly use this as an argument to take away the skill of endotracheal intubation at the Paramedic level? Let’s address this question with some very reasonable concerns that come up regarding airway management training in Paramedic school. With so much to cover in a short period of time, airway management does not get NEAR the time it deserves in our initial education. We are taught that an RSI is a lighting speed process, we are told to hold our breath and when we need to breathe, it’s time to get out! We are led to believe that we will dip the blade into the hypopharynx and immediately see the cords!! These teachings create a nervous and jittery intubator who isn’t breathing because some clown told him to hold his breath! There competency is validated by their ability to perform five intubations in a nicely lit, controlled environment. Under the heuristics and proper set up of an anesthesiologist. So now you are probably wondering… where are the tips?? This just seems like a dig at formal paramedic education! The first tip is to realize that you are an “occasional intubator”. Don’t let that discourage you though, because you can achieve excellence with this skill, you just need to put all the odds in your favor. Tip 1. Positioning 99% of the time in school you will be intubating mannequin heads that are stuck to a flat board. You will find yourself bending down low and trying to get eye level with the larynx axis. Finger tips turn white as you struggle to lift forward enough to see the cords, while trying to not use the teeth as a fulcrum. There are three axis we need to become familiar with when intubating. The oral, pharyngeal, and laryngeal axis. These can easily be aligned by putting the patient in an ear to sternal notch position. When applied properly, you really only need the laryngoscope to lift the tongue out of the way. This technique in cooperation with airway adjuncts also helps optimize First Pass Ventilation (FPV) with a BVM. The saying “work smarter, not harder” really applies simply to the way you position your patient. Tip 2. Delay Your Sequence Intubation is not a game of speed. Get scene times out of your head for a minute and realize that speed means nothing when you deliver a hypoxic patient in peri-arrest. Delayed Sequence Intubation (DSI) is procedural sedation, with the procedure being pre-oxygenation. If you are intubating a hypoxic patient, you are setting yourself up for failure. Take the time to properly pre-oxygenate & denitrogenate your patient. This usually takes about 3 minutes to perform…. Can you wait that long? It may seem like FOREVER, but trust me it will give you a safety net during intubation. The goal of the peri-intubation period is to have the patient spontaneously breathing as much as possible up until the point of intubation. This prevents excessive bagging, gastric insufflation, and some of the negative effects of BVM ventilation. Most induction agents will depress your respiratory drive such as versed, etomidate, fentanyl, etc. So how do we keep this breathing adequately up until the point of intubation?

 Podcast 18 - Abdominal Hypertension & ACS With Kyle Driesse | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:16:46

VIOLET.. YOUR TURNING VIOLET! What patients are at risk for IAH or ACS? Is this something I should be measuring?! These questions and more are discussed when I bring back on the show my friend Kyle Driesse. References: Guidelines from the World Society of Abdominal Compartment Syndrome. https://wsacs.org/education.html Mechanical ventilation and intra-abdominal hypertension: 'Beyond Good and Evil' Crit Care. 2012; 16(6): 187. Published online 2012 Dec 18. doi: 10.1186/cc11874 Leave questions or comments below! Thanks for listening.

 Podcast 17 - How To Not Look Like An Idiot During A Pediatric Arrest | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:15

This was a lecture I gave at Lifestar this month on the logistics of a pediatric arrest. During this talk I list five aspects to consider before you are center stage. Hope you enjoy!

 Podcast 16 -The Creator, The Critic, and The Consumer | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:11:21

FOAMed has completely changed the way we learn. Dry boring topics are now infused with enthusiastic lectures an evidence based practice. This podcast discusses the vital roles of our world.

 Podcast 15 - The Science Of Chest Compressions | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:12:53

In this episode we dissect the science behind chest compression's, restoring vascular gradient, and making chest compressions sexy. Nothing ground breaking.. just some good mental images next time you assume the most important position of a cardiac arrest.

 Podcast 14 - "The Day I Almost Died..... From SVT" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:11:56

I saw my whole life flash before my eyes........... Thanks ACLS.

 Podcast 13 - Your Mother On A Vent Part 2 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:21:59

Sam Ireland concludes his lecture with two more MUST KNOW ventilator settings. Make sure you listen to podcast #1 and # 11 following this lecture. Hope you enjoy!

 Podcast 12 -Your Mother On A Vent Part 1 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:21:00

Imagine you had to set up the ventilator setting for your first love.. your mom! Are you up to the task? If not, why should anyone else trust you with their family? Sam Ireland puts ventilator management into perspective in this powerful lecture at the 2015 Lifestar Critical Care Conference.

 Podcast 11 - Flavors of Obstruction | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:13:40

Why do we classify all obstruction patients into the same vent settings?! The mechanisms behind the obstruction is vastly different, and subsequently some of the vent settings will be as well. In this podcast I create two subcategories of the "obstructive" approach, and discuss how the pathophysiology behind the illness is the key to understanding when to apply PEEP.

 Podcast 10 -Waterhole For The Credulous | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:07:57

The entire purpose of this podcast is to serve as a place to send knowledge thirsty people after they wake up from under their rock, and ask why we prefer Rocoronium over Succinylcholine in 2017. Feel free to guide people to the watering hole of modern medicine.

 Podcast 9 - Treating Atrial Fibrillation .... With Fluid! | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:07:44

You learn a lot of interesting things while teaching ACLS renewal classes.... This podcast serves as a mountain for me to shout my opinion on treating atrial fibrillation. The majority of these patients DONT need rate control... they need volume.

 Podcast 8 - Cirrhotic Sedation | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:13:22

Yellow, hypotensive and a big belly full of fluid! Liver failure patients can be a sedation/hemodynamic nightmare. Use these tips and tricks to customize the sedation package based on the patients condition. Low serum proteins = low drug binding. The usual dose of sedatives can be deleterious to the patient in hepatic failure.

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