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Thunderchild145

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Posts posted by Thunderchild145

  1. Right on. Since the doc said she probably would have died had she gone by ground to an ER, I think that about sums it up. If I was the patient, I'd rather spend the money for a helicopter than die, and I'd rather have a 10 minute ride to a Level 1 than a 20 minute ride to a Level 2.

  2. Point being, paramedics have better assesment and treatment skills than EMT-Basics. Even -without- ALS supplies like IVs, cardiac monitors, etc. etc. etc. The paramedic using his knowledge of A&P is better prepared to assess the patient and give a handoff to the ER. And, as before mentioned, it's usually not acceptable for an ALS provider to turf a patient to BLS providers, at least here.

  3. We just got done covering this. For the chest leads, they are contiguous. I.E. when looking for Q waves and ST elevation you look for it in pairs, right? Well if you see it in V2 and V3, that counts. V2, V3, and V4 would indicate anteroseptal STEMI/AMI, even if V1 shows nothing.

  4. I do not understand this comment. How does gtt/min mean nothing, it means alot. Lets say you are using a pump and it breaks and you are in the middle of a transfer. You are going to have to use gtt/min I would think.

    Very simple really. You can figure out gtt/min is you are given mg/min, but you can't really figure out mg/min when given gtt/min, thenfore it's always best to describe in mg/min. Everything else is variable, but mg/min should always be constant.

  5. Whoa whoa. 300mg IVP is for WCT -Arrest- patients. If the patient is not in cardiac arrest you infuse 150mg of the drug over either 10 minutes or 360mg over 6 hours depending on how high you want the serum concentration. Then again your protocols may be different. Anyway.

    We give 300mg IVP for VF/VT diluted in 20-30ml of Normal Saline with a repeat of 150mg IVP q 3-5 minutes. For Stable WCT, you mix 150mg of Amiodarone with 100ml NS or D5W and run at 10ml/min for a 10 minute infusion which you can repeat once if it fails to convert. The repeat is the same as the first. 150mg over 10 minutes.

    For a slow infusion you mix 1000mg in 500ml of solute and run at 30 ugtt/min (1mg/min).

    Finally for peds, it's 5mg/kg IV/IO.

    Contraindications are hypotension, cardiogenic shock, hypersensitivity, pulmonary congestion, and 2nd or 3rd degree AV blocks. The most common side effects I've seen when using it is headache and dizziness, but it can also cause hypotension, bradycardia, AV conduction problems, flushing, and excess salivation.

  6. I think you still may be able to buy monophasic Lifepak 12s, but don't quote me on that.

    Yea, actually now that I look at Medtronic ERS's website it says "Available with Adaptiv biphasic technology." That leads me to believe that not all of them come with biphasic, even brand new ones. So I retract the previous statement. =)

  7. Yea, this is not another Zoll vs Lifepak thread. This is just asking if all Lifepaks are biphasic. The answer is indeed no. Only the new Lifepak 12s are biphasic. If you bought it a few years ago, it might still be monophasic.

  8. Yea. This is not really a situation I'd give electric medicine first. I'd try adenosine. Failing to see results after 6/12/12 of adenosine or if the patient destableized (drop of BP, CP, syncope) then yea I'd cardiovert but I've always had better results in converting SVT with drugs than countershcoks.

  9. Yea. They typically don't need years to start trying to control this thing. If you were hypertensive back in 1999, they should have told you then and there to start trying to control it through lifestyle changes. (mainly exercise and diet) and scheduling a followup. Not for years later, but months later. If you showed no improvement with exercise and diet they would probably try pharacological interventions. Speaking of, the typical drugs you get are dieuretics, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and beta-blocking agents. You're probably on at least one of these three types of medications now. Good luck with this.

  10. A-Fib is always irregular. A-Flutter however can be regular.

    With this one, I think I'd go with what has already been said. V-Tach until I can prove it isn't V-Tach. ST with BBB? I don't see any P waves. They could be hidden in the T wave, but I just don't see them so I still think VT. A-fib with BBB? Again A-Fib has to be irregular. Ventricular Pacemaker? Well I guess it depends what type of monitor you have. I know on ours, it -will not- display pacer spikes. Instead it places a triangle on the strip whenever it detects one, but you'd have to have a printout of your 4 lead to find out. (It won't print the triangles on the 12 lead.) and that's with our Physiocontrol Lifepak 12. Still, I gotta call this V-tach. As before it's slow, but I still think V-tach.

  11. My service uses the "partnered" system Dust was talking about with a Paramedic partnered with a Basic. I think it works well because most (note: most) of our basics are capable and know what needs to be done. They really help the paramedics. Here in Arkansas I'm pretty sure that the emergency ambulances all have to have a paramedic on them, but we also have many first responder squads in the area that are staffed by MFRs and EMT-Bs. Usually they get there before the paramedic. I can appreciate an extra hand when it's offered.

    The other thing about my area is that EMT-Bs are a dime a dozen, but paramedics are gold here because there aren't many of them.

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