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[Note:
This article is from an earlier issue. If you see Dr. Karl,
tell him we're gonna give 'im the boot if he doesn't
drop us a line soon!!]
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Dr.
Karl Newman
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Running
a cardiac arrest for the first time can be one of the most anxiety-filled
experiences in residency. It's also your chance to save a life!
This
week, Q Fever!'s I&R correspondent, Dr. Karl Newman,
walks you through an approach to cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Aaaaah,
Codes! If residency is a plate of bubbling gruel, codes are a
side order of buffalo wings.
It's like
my senior resident used to tell me:
If
you really wanna save a life,
A code's no time to call yo' wife!
Here's
a little scenario to getcha in the mood. The code pager goes off: "Code
Blue, 5-West, Code Blue, 5-West". You bolt outta the call room
and run down the flight of stairs to the cafeteria. You quickly buy
your last slice of pizza for the night, and sprint back to the elevators
to wait impatiently for the elevator back to the fifth floor. You run
down the hall to the room... it's time to run a code!
WAIT!
It's an old rule but it still holds: before you do anything, take
your OWN pulse. I like to take my intern's pulse too. If the medical
student on the team is a cutie, I take her pulse also, but femorals
are strictly out of bounds.
Now,
here are a few quick rules to help you run a code like Dr. Karl:
1.
Should The Patient Be Resuscitated?
Be
sure and check with the floor nurses whether the patient is "DNR"
or "CMO" before you begin resuscitation efforts. But remember:
it ain't cool to avoid resuscitating patients just because you
can't find the chart. As my senior resident used to say:
Primum
non nocere,
semper vivici mostrere!
2.
The ABCs
Remember
these? Airway, Breathing, and Crowd control. Huh?!?!
You heard me: crowd control. There's nothing to make hospital
types rubberneck like the energy and excitement of a code. You don't
need more than five people in the room to run it right, and that includes
the poor guy gettin' the chest compressions! Be forceful. Janitors on
smoke break, chaplains itchin' for action, unit coordinators fussin'
with paperwork: tell 'em to cool their heels in the hall. Sez
who? Sez you! And don't forget, you've got 360 joules
of defibrillator firepower backing you up!
3.
Everybody Clear
The
ACLS manual goes on and on about the potential dangers of defibrillator
paddles, but once you've let loose with the juice a couple of times,
they become a lot less scary. If you're the one operating the paddles,
it's considered good form to make sure everyone's far away from the
bed or gurney. Off the record, though, I can tell you this from experience:
if the orderly happens to have a pinkie touching the bed-rail when you
press the magic buttons, it ain't gonna do much except erase a little
bit of recent memory.
Make
no mistake about it: the defibrillator paddles are trés importante
for the successful resuscitation of an arrest victim. I made up a little
poem to remind myself how important they are:
Shock,
shock, shock!
Everybody shock!
Pull up your sock,
And shock, shock, shock!
Feel
free to use this poem to help remind yourself about the importance of
the shocks!
4.
Other Stuff
There's
a bunch of drugs that are supposedly helpful too, but several of them
have long, hard-to-remember names, and frankly, they're just not as
enjoyable to administer as electric shocks. I generally avoid 'em. I
also have a hard time remembering which drugs can be given down the
endotracheal tube, but you can stay out of trouble by remembering this
short list of substances which you should NEVER put down an endotracheal
tube:
·
Woolite
· Tapioca pudding
· Cat hairballs
· Snuff
5.
When Your Efforts Are Unsuccessful
Let's
face it: no matter how good you get at running codes, most times you
will be unsuccessful. Even if things were pretty hopeless, I try to
make everyone feel better by saying things like "don't blame me,
'cuz it's all the stupid intern's fault." Saying this in front
of the intern will also keep 'em motivated to hone those skills
for the next code...
...and remember: there's always a next code!!
Just
tell 'em Dr. Karl sent ya!
Karl
Newman, MD is a second-year resident in Internal Medicine.
The views expressed in this article to not necessarily represent those
of Q Fever!, its editors, or its writers.