Sandbox: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
*If moderate (temperature 30-34°C), proceed with resuscitation (space medications at intervals greater than usual), actively rewarm truncal body areas | *If moderate (temperature 30-34°C), proceed with resuscitation (space medications at intervals greater than usual), actively rewarm truncal body areas | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Hypovolemia, hemorrhage, | | [[Hypovolemia]], [[hemorrhage]], [[anemi]]a|| | ||
*Major burns, DM, GI losses, hemorrhage, hemorrhagic diathesis, cancer, pregnancy, shock, trauma | |||
|| | |||
*Give fluids *Transfuse pRBCs if hemorrhage or profound anemia is present | |||
*Thoracotomy is appropriate when patient has cardiac arrest from penetrating trauma and a cardiac rhythm and the duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation before thoracotomy is <10 min | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Hypoxia||Consider in all patients with cardiac arrest||Reassess technical quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, oxygenation, and ventilation; reconfirm ETT placement | | [[Hypoxia]]|| | ||
*Consider in all patients with cardiac arrest||Reassess technical quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, oxygenation, and ventilation; reconfirm ETT placement | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Hypomagnesemia||Alcohol abuse, burns, DKA, severe diarrhea, diuretics, drugs (eg, cisplatin, cyclosporine, pentamidine)||Give 1-2 g magnesium sulfate intravenously over 2 min | | Hypomagnesemia||Alcohol abuse, burns, DKA, severe diarrhea, diuretics, drugs (eg, cisplatin, cyclosporine, pentamidine)||Give 1-2 g magnesium sulfate intravenously over 2 min | ||
Revision as of 20:59, 31 May 2023
| Condition | Common clinical settings | Corrective actions |
| Acidosis |
|
|
| Cardiac tamponade |
|
|
| Hypothermia |
|
|
| Hypovolemia, hemorrhage, anemia |
|
|
| Hypoxia |
| |
| Hypomagnesemia | Alcohol abuse, burns, DKA, severe diarrhea, diuretics, drugs (eg, cisplatin, cyclosporine, pentamidine) | Give 1-2 g magnesium sulfate intravenously over 2 min |
| Myocardial infarction | Consider in all patients with cardiac arrest, especially those with a history of coronary artery disease or prearrest acute coronary syndrome | Consider definitive care (eg, thrombolytic therapy, cardiac catheterization or coronary artery reperfusion, circulatory assist device, emergency cardiopulmonary bypass) |
| Poisoning | Alcohol abuse, bizarre or puzzling behavioral or metabolic presentation, classic toxicologic syndrome, occupational or industrial exposure, and psychiatric disease | Consult toxicologist for emergency advice on resuscitation and definitive care, including appropriate antidote |
| Prolonged resuscitation efforts may be appropriate; immediate cardiopulmonary bypass should be considered, if available | ||
| Hyperkalemia | Metabolic acidosis, excessive administration of potassium, drugs and toxins, vigorous exercise, hemolysis, renal disease, rhabdomyolysis, tumor lysis syndrome, and clinically significant tissue injury | If hyperkalemia is identified or strongly suspected, treat with all of the following: 10% calcium chloride (5-10 mL by slow intravenous push; do not use if hyperkalemia is secondary to digitalis poisoning), glucose and insulin (50 mL of 50% dextrose in water and 10 units of regular insulin intravenously), sodium bicarbonate (50 mmoL intravenously; most effective if concomitant metabolic acidosis is present), and albuterol (15-20mg nebulized or 0.5mg by intravenous infusion) |
| Hypokalemia | Alcohol abuse, diabetes, use of diuretics, drugs and toxins, profound gastroinstestinal losses, hypomagnesemia | If profond hypokalemia (<2-2.5 mmoL of potassium per liter) is accompanied by cardiac arrest, initiate urgent intravenous replacement (2 mmoL/min intravenously for 10-15 mmoL), then reassess |
| Pulmonary embolism | Hospitalized patient, recent surgical procedure, peripartum, known risk factors for venous thromboembolism, history of venous thromboembolism, or prearrest presentation consistent with diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism | *Administer fluids; augment with vasopressors as necessary *Confirm diagnosis, if possible; consider immediate cardiopulmonary bypass to maintain patient's viability *Consider definitive care (eg, thrombolytic therapy, embolectomy by interventional radiology or surgery) |
| Tension pneumothorax | Placement of central catheter, mechanical ventilation, pulmonary disease (including asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and necrotizing pneumonia), thoracentesis, and trauma | Needle decompression, followed by chest-tube insertion |
