Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

99NICU

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

bimalc

Member
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Country

    United States

Everything posted by bimalc

  1. At my new institution, we have fixed ratio "K-cocktail" available during codes with (I believe) Insulin, glucose, calcium and bicarbonate. I can get the exact concentrations/doses on Monday when I am back in the unit if you'd like.
  2. I trained using Rocuronium for intubation and during GA for bedside OR cases. When the hospital trying to conserve roc we used vecuronium as a muscle relaxer for intubated patients who needed it. At my current institution, we use succinylcholine for non-emergent intubation and vecuronium if continued paralysis is required.
  3. Can you clarify if you are referring to premature infants with intact bowel or post-surgical short gut/intestinal failure patients? Your options/goals are somewhat different in each setting.
  4. 1-4 ug/kg/h infusions, usually the lower end of that spectrum, titrating by 0.5 to 1 to effect. Obviously respiratory depression is an issue, but these drips are almost exclusively used in intubated patients so less of a concern. Less uniform practice in my group, historically have used methadone or morphine to come off high dose infusions, but we're increasingly using dexmedetomidine for much the same reason/effect as @frvg666 uses clonidine when coming off larger exposures.
  5. Would you care to elaborate? I found your comment the most interesting one aside from the actual clinical narrative that is
  6. Difficult to say without the rest of the relevant parameters on both the vent and the baby, but one has to ask why you aren't on CPAP at that point.
  7. With the humble acknowledgement that I have no idea what the state of clinical informatics is in your work environment, I have to wonder if the use case(s) you envision are not available natively or with some minimal repurposing within your electronic medical record. Depending on the amount of turn over on your unit, the risks of missing patients coming on or off teams may be significant when using auxiliary information systems not tied to hospital census. There may also be significant risks to data security and privacy breaches if you're operating what amounts to a shadow medical record. Finally duplicative data entry may lead to discrepancies across data sources as well as end user resentment at the extra work. For the past decade or so, I have worked in units where the hand off is generated from the medical record (with the exception of 2 level III units that have since moved to handoffs generated by the medical record system). It has the virtue of always having accurate census, bed space and order information. It has the vice of almost always having too much information as well as requiring us to be dependent on hospital IT to update the format/content. Please ignore my ramblings if you're considering this for a unit in a setting with no functional electronic medical record system.
  8. Are you able to elaborate on the chest CT and/or share images? I find it quite hard to fathom how a CXR showed total white out at the same time that a chest CT was completely normal. Also, more clinical information would be helpful: blood gases, response to surfactant, vent settings, etc.
  9. Regarding your first question, if you're going to use raw Cr values, please remember that early Cr reflects mother more than baby and that protein malnutrition causes SCr based measures of renal function to over estimate function. In practice I find the various measures used in the AWAKEN studies to be more useful: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5933049/
  10. If you're going to run that much fluid at this age you will need to keep an eye on Na and volume status. As the skin keratinizes, lung disease evolves, renal concentrating ability fluctuates and you're possibly trying to coax a PDA to close you may need to be quite nimble in your goals for the day. In my experience, I am good about proactively considering fluids as we come out of the DR, but could perhaps be better with the 1-2 week olds who still need IV fluids/nutrition.
  11. The data is fairly clear that routine checking of gastric residuals is neither sensitive nor specific for serious pathology (aside from possibly enteric tube placement). The practice is associated prolonged time to full enteral feeds which itself is associated with a number of downstream consequences (increased central line days, extrauterine growth failure, LOS, etc.). While the Cochrane reviews indicate these secondary effects are uncertain, the preponderance of evidence favors either no difference or favors not checking.
  12. Is there an error in the patient age or diagnosis? I can count on one hand the number of 3 year olds I have cared for in a NICU and collodion babies shed their initial dermatological findings in 1-3 weeks depending on etiology (at which time fluid management is much easier).
  13. My current units do not admit babies who have been home for exactly the reason @Stefan Johansson said. However, I trained at two children's hospitals that did admit such babies. The mainstay of therapy is supportive care: positive pressure as needed, vigorous airway suction, recognition that apnea is common in RSV with neonates and that intubation can be more challenging than 'typical' neonatal intubation because these patients are often much larger than what we are used to (and thus good access and premedication for intubation under controlled conditions is VERY beneficial). Of the listed inhalation therapies hypertonic saline can perhaps shorten length of stay by <1 day. When the diagnosis is known (and assuming this is a previously healthy term baby) there is little indication for albuterol/atrovent (except maybe albuterol for bronchospasm after hypertonic saline). Sorry, not a lot of data, just anecdote.
  14. No, but I feel the need to point out that (part of) the rationale for acetate in PN for premature infants is not for base infusion, per se, but rather to displace chloride and avoidance of iatrogenic hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis which is obviously a completely different problem than the bicarb infusions discussed in this thread. Contrary to the presented data that bicarb infusion is useless, there is a reasonable amount of data (though less for premature infants) that hyperchloremia is quite harmful. I'm not aware of any data arguing against acetate in parenteral nutrition for displacement of chloride. My experience is that it is almost never required and the handful of times I have done it I doubt that it is of any value. On the contrary, I have found that with appropriate fluid/volume management, aggressive use of acetate in parenteral nutrition to limit chloride infusion and good renal protection, metabolic acidosis is easily managed in all but the most extreme cases.
  15. Not routinely, but for high risk extubations we often coordinate with ENT and make plans for things like race epi at extubation to Heliox. I've also used it many times as rescue therapy when there is post-extubation stridor and I am trying to buy time for airway steroids to kick in.
  16. There are several articles describing its use for this purpose and I would agree that it has very desirable properties. Sadly, not stocked by pharmacy at the institutions I have worked at recently.
  17. I haven't used morphine for intubation in almost 10 years. The onset and duration of fentanyl are overall more desirable for purposes of intubation.
  18. I've come late to the conversation after being on vacation and of course the dx of pneumatosis is not in question. I am, however, interested in the recommendation for surgical consultation: What is everyone's threshold for consulting surgery in NEC? Frankly, if I did not need to worry about my relationship with the surgeons more generally, I would only call them if I thought ex-lap or a drain made sense. This was the practice at the last in-born ICU I worked in whereas as the outborn unit I last worked in every child with NEC got a surgical consult. The difficulty with this was that the surgeons would then insist on driving the decisions on abx and NPO
  19. I've used roughly the same thresholds as Hamed, fudging a little higher or lower based on symptoms. In addition to the collateral information Hamed recommended, the single biggest thing to figure out (in my experience) is whether this is iatrogenic or not. Often times, iatrogenic hypercalcemia even at high levels, can self-correct whereas if there is a real underlying cause, that too can suggest definitive therapy. Assuming it is not iatrogenic and the Family history is non-contributory, I would at least consider a diagnosis of William's Syndrome.
  20. I practice in two very different ICU environments, one delivery and one which is more of a med-surg ICU closer to a PICU than a NICU in many ways. I think the data are clear and many of the previous respondents concur that NaHCO3 in the delivery setting is at best useless. For the ELBW with anticipated renal losses NaHCO3 should almost never be needed because these losses can be anticipated and should be incorporated into nutrition to avoid the biochemical inevitabilities noted in the articles Stefan cited. I suppose I might use bicarb in the preemie population if I had metabolic acidosis and evidence it was effecting cardiac output and even then I probably would not correct past 7.2. However, in the case of the older child or the med-surg patient where some specific pathologic perturbation has led to rapid collapse and I suspect part of that mechanism is bicarb deficit, I would have no hesitation to rapid correct the pH. I have several times done this and watched the EKG improve in real time.
  21. When I was a fellow, I trained at a delivery hospital that used flow-inflating bags and it made this sort of failure very easy to recognize (if there was any defect in flow, the bag would not inflate). The downside to this is that without flow you can't give ANY respiratory support (after a critical incident of this kind where the flow inflating bag actually ripped in the middle of a resuscitation, we started stocking an emergency ambulance bag as back-up).
  22. The UVC is clearly malpositioned. We could have an academic discussion of what vessel you've ended up in, but that thing is never going to get to the IVC/RA junction. It is also worth noting that the enteric tube appears coiled on itself also needs to be adjusted. Just curious, but was the indication for line placement?
  23. In the top right corner of the site is a link to an English language version of the software, but I did not see extensive English language documentation
  24. The problem with this population is seldom in the ICU setting (assuming people are not actually smoking in your ICU), however, from my experience as a house officer on a children's hospital pulmonary ward, certainly children with BPD will suffer from a home environment full of smoke (it certainly felt like many of the BPD 'frequent flyers' had parents who smoked while the pulmonary fellows would insist that their BPD clinics were not like this).

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.