FOAMfrat Podcast

Podcast 154 - ROSC Temp & Sedation w/ Dr. Leon Eydelman

02.06.2023 - By Tyler Christifulli & Sam IrelandPlay

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0.9. When a patient is in shock, their volume of distribution changes, and peripheral blood flow is reduced. This means more blood is shunted to the brain,, and lower doses of sedation will give the agent therapeutic brain levels.","type":"unstyled","depth":0,"inlineStyleRanges":[],"entityRanges":[],"data":{}}],"entityMap":{},"VERSION":"9.3.6"}"> What aspects of temperature-targeted management are most important to EMS, and how should EMS guide sedation for the patient with a return of spontaneous circulation? Check out this interview w/ Dr. Leon Eydelman! The ROSC class referenced in this video can be found in FOAMfrat Studio!   Highlights   ROSC + FEVER = Bad. Trust a high temperature and question a low one.   While most EMS agencies likely do not carry propofol, it is the most commonly used sedation medication in the ED because it washes out quickly and allows for neuro eval. Benzodiazepines are associated with higher rates of ICU delirium and complications. Running levophed to counteract the vasodilation aspect of propofol. Don't have propofol; hemodynamic-dosed ketamine is a good option as well.   The sedation dose should be reduced when the shock index is > 0.9. When a patient is in shock, their volume of distribution changes, and peripheral blood flow is reduced. This means more blood is shunted to the brain,, and lower doses of sedation will give the agent therapeutic brain levels.

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