Showing posts with label emergency techniques. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency techniques. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Fast Relief, and Simple


In response to my recent "Pain in the Ass" post, in which the subject was a simple procedure bringing rapid and dramatic relief, commenters have mentioned other similar interventions. Seems like a fun topic. Here's a list I can think of (a couple of which are those mentioned in the comments, by readers.) Anyone want to chime in with others?

  • Giving "Narcan" to an overdose patient: within seconds a moribund and blue, pin-point-pupilled addict is transformed to a yelling and screaming maniac.
  • Similarly: Dextrose IV for hypoglycemia rapidly raises from unconsciousness to lucidity.
  • Relieving a subungual hematoma with the red-hot tip of a straightened and heated paper clip. FZZZT, and the patient is happy!
  • Draining any sort of painful abscess under local: pilonidal, perianal. The patient has arrived in abject pain, hardly able to walk, and leaves smiling and light on his feet.
  • Releasing a tension pneumothorax with a needle. FZZZT, and the patient is happy!
  • Reducing a dislocated shoulder: the water-bucket trick is rewardingly direct, low-tech, and effective. Pop >>> ahhh!
  • Pulling back a too-far inserted endotracheal tube. The oximeter tone rises steadily.
  • Untwisting a sigmoid volvulus with a scope. Stand back, or let someone else do it. Dramatic to all senses.
  • Cricothyroidotomy. Too scary to be fun, it certainly qualifies as dramatic and effective, especially when done with nothing but a large IV catheter.
  • Sticking a finger onto a major bleeding artery, the kind you can hear. It doesn't solve the problem but it sure as hell is a relief for the moment. When the natural instinct is to turn the head away, which some in the assemblage might do, it seems sort of heroic.
  • Squeezing bags of fluid or blood with both hands, and seeing the blood pressure rise and pulse fall within moments.
  • Carotid sinus massage: I actually did it once, for atrial flutter with syncope, absent readily available meds. I kept thinking I'd cause a stroke, and never had to do it again. Still, it's a nice maneuver based on medical school knowledge of cardiovascular physiology.
  • Opening a chest and pericardium, of course, and poking a finger into a heart wound. Been there, done that. Not so simple, but uber-dramatic. Relieving pressure in a pericardium by whatever means can resurrect a person in an instant.
  • Quickly accessing the subclavian vein. Simple. But often tricky enough that when you pop in the needle and get a nice flashback of blood in a couple of seconds, it feels pretty good.
  • Inserting a suprapubic bladder catheter when you can't get a foley to pass.
  • Apocryphal, perhaps? Everyone says it happened in their ER: giving sux to a hopelessly combative patient. Calms them right down.
  • Administering valium for status epilepticus.
  • Anyone perform/experience others?

Sampler

Moving this post to the head of the list, I present a recently expanded sampling of what this blog has been about. Occasional rant aside, i...