Procedural sedation
Revision as of 19:40, 14 July 2011 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Background
- Placing pt on ETCO2 + SpO2 is best
- If do not have ETCO2 consider placing pt on room air alone
- Works as indirect measure of ventilation (as CO2 incr, SpO2 decr)
- If do not have ETCO2 consider placing pt on room air alone
- Position pt in position you would intubate them (ear at level of sternal notch)
- Consider nasal airway in pt with likely OSA
Sedation Levels
- Minimal Sedation
- Pain meds
- Moderate Sedation
- Pt awake, pt able to respond to questions
- LP, I+D
- Deep Sedation
- If give pt painful stimuli they will react purposefully
- Reduction,
- General Anesthesia
- Unarousable
Agents
Fentanyl/Versed
- Designed for moderate sedation
- If titrate to deep sedation, when painful stimulus stops may become apneic
- Duration = 30min
Etomidate/Fentanyl
- Similar to versed/fentanyl but better b/c of shorter duration of action
- Good for brief sedation if don't have access to propofol
- E.g. shoulder/hip reduction, cardioversion
- Dose fentanyl first: 0.5-1mcg/kg
- Etomidate 0.15mg/kg (8-10mg avg)
- Wears off in 6min
Propofol
- Similar to etomidate/fentanyl
- Give fentanyl 1-1.5mcg/kg first
- Give initial 0.5mg/kg dose
- Give another 0.5mg/kg as needed
- Works w/in 60s
- Duration only few minutes
- See Propofol
Ketamine
- Ideal for extended procedural time, complete analegesia, muscle relaxation
- See Ketamine
Side Effects
- Desaturation
- Stimulate
- Try pressure behind ear
- Jaw thrust
- Nasal airway
- BVM (just 10 breaths/min) count to 5 between breaths
- NIV
- LMA
- Intubation
- Stimulate
Source
EMCrit Podcast 29
