Critical Care Scenarios

Brandon Oto, PA-C, FCCM and Bryan Boling, DNP, ACNP, FCCM
Critical Care Scenarios

Join us as we talk through clinical cases in the ICU setting, illustrating important points of diagnosis, treatment, and management of the critically ill patient, all in a casual, "talk through" verbal scenario format.

  1. 8 JAN

    Episode 83: Cardiac arrest with Scott Weingart

    We talk about the nitty-gritty details of a well-run cardiac arrest, with Scott Weingart of Emcrit (@emcrit), ED intensivist. Learn more at the Intensive Care Academy! Find us on Patreon here! Buy your merch here! Takeaway lessons * In any sudden loss of pulse/consciousness, particularly in a known cardiac patient, the presumption should be for a shockable arrhythmia and rapid defibrillation should be prioritized above all else. * Anterior-posterior pad placement may or may not be superior, but tends to be logistically helpful, as it allows rolling the patient a single time then never again; a second set of pads can be added for double sequential defibrillation without moving them, and a mechanical compression device can be applied at the same time as the pads. * The primary or highest-trained provider should not be the sole “code runner,” but ideally offering high-level leadership, thinking about reversible causes and judgment calls, and performing procedures, while another leader (often a nurse) runs the standard activities of ACLS such as timing, coordinating rhythm checks, assigning jobs, quality assurance, and directing the room. That frees your cognitive bandwidth by handling all your logistics, and they can act as the one-stop-shop for passing needs and issues up and down the chain. * IOs are probably the go-to for immediate access, if no IVs are present. But Scott likes to always place central access, usually femoral. He does ECPR, so the access may be needed, and even if not, it maintains the skill for next time. He also likes an arterial line, so it’s easy to place venous alongside it. He would generally not place it fully sterile (gowns, drapes, etc), but will use sterile gloves and prep the skin, assuming that any femoral line placed in the ED is going to be replaced within 24 hours. * Scott loves an arterial line. It eliminates the “pulse check,” allowing instant confirmation of pulsatility, while also allowing a very sophisticated assessment of coronary perfusion. * A diastolic BP above 35–40 mmHg, measured from the arterial line during cardiac arrest, suggests adequate coronary perfusion. This must be measured manually, as the automated number will falsely measure the wrong spot in the waveform during the “suction” of chest recoil (see link below); the true point of measurement is just before the upstroke of systole begins. If you’re above this DBP, just skip epinephrine, which will probably merely be toxic (ie promoting arrhythmias). * A low DBP should be used as a general marker of poor perfusion, and prompt other changes. Try modifying the point of compressions on the chest to avoid obstructing the LVOT (TEE is even better for this, but not available most places). Swap out compressors to ensure the most vigorous compressions, even if they still “look okay” or claim to be. Look for a reversible cause, such as hemorrhage or obstruction. Finally, if it’s truly just vasoplegia, consider other moves, such as adding vasopressin/steroids (an evidence-based practice) or high-dose epinephrine (5 mg epinephrine). * ETCO2 should be used in all arrests, to confirm airways, prognosticate, and provide a marker of perfusion much like the arterial DBP. * Scott thinks we should stick to 30:20 mask ventilation when an airway is not in place; breat...

    1h 10m
  2. 25/12/2024

    Lightning rounds 48: Complete airway closure with Thomas Piraino

    We talk about the phenomenon of airway closure during mechanical ventilation, with Thomas Piraino, RRT, FCSRT, FAARC, adjunct lecturer for the Department of Anesthesia at McMaster University, editor of The Centre of Excellence in Mechanical Ventilation Blog, and a member of the editorial board of Respiratory Care. Learn more at the Intensive Care Academy! Find us on Patreon here! Buy your merch here! Takeaway lessons * Airway closure occurs when airways, probably smaller ones (ie bronchioles) completely collapse at some point during expiration, causing flow to cease. * This creates a false understanding of the “PEEP,” which may actually be higher than the set PEEP (effectively an autoPEEP), and hence an incorrect understanding of the driving pressure and compliance. (This autoPEEP may or may not be effective, as at higher FiO2s, this trapped volume may rapidly absorp, causing absorption atelectasis.) * It may cause lung injury at the airway level from cyclic opening/closing, separate from more-discussed alveolar injury. * ARDS, pulmonary edema, and obesity are all risk factors. Post-cardiac arrest is a particularly common substrate. Obstructive diseases like asthma/COPD can probably see this as well, although the recent discourse has focused on the hypoxic conditions; the phenotype is probably different, caused by intrathoracic pressure, not by air-fluid interfaces and surfactant issues. * Probably 40% of at-risk patients may see this phenomenon occur. Its presence and the pressure where it occurs may be labile and dependent on the clinical condition. It should probably be checked at least daily in such patients. * It may cause hypercarbia by terminating expiration early, leading to air trapping. Prolonging the expiratory time will not help, as flow has ceased. * Plateau pressure may be elevated. Expiratory holds will not reveal this, however. A visible inflection point in continuous-flow VC breaths that has a different height (higher) than the gap between the peak and plateau pressure may be a rough suggestion of this as well. * Plateau pressures will be accurate, as the airways should be open at peak inspiration (or no breath would be delivered). Thus, increasing PEEP and seeing no change in plateau pressure may be a sign of airway closure, although it can also be due to alveolar recruitment. * Active patient effort during exhalation may worsen this phenomenon, particularly in the obstructive patient, due to increasing intrathoracic pressure. * The best test is a slow-flow inflation curve. Draeger and Hamilton should have this built in (Hamilton does this incrementally, not continuously, which may make it a little harder to identify the exact inflection point). It can be done manually as such (patient must be passive): * Set VC mode * Square wave flow * Flow 5L/min * Rate 5/min * PEEP 5 (or higher if needed for oxygenation) * Freeze the screen and inspect the pressure scalar during inspiration. The upramp should be steady and continuous. If there is a change in slope or inflection point, this suggests a change in compliance, probably due to airway opening. Use the vent to measure pressure at this point. * A clever time to do this might be shortly after intubation,

    1h 14m
  3. 13/11/2024

    Episode 81: Bacterial meningitis with Casey Albin

    We talk about diagnosis, treatment, and subsequent care of the patient with bacterial meningitis, with Emory neurointensivist Casey Albin, MD (@caseyalbin). Learn more at the Intensive Care Academy! Find us on Patreon here! Buy your merch here! Takeaway lessons * Many septic patients have altered mental status, but suspicion should be raised for CNS infection when there is also: headache, photophobia, vomiting, or any possibility of seizure activity. * Meningitis and encephalitis are separate entities usually involving different organisms, different imaging findings, and with different prognostic implications and downstream complications. However, at the early diagnostic stage, they can be largely lumped together. * Empiric antimicrobials must consider CNS penetration. Piperacillin/tazobactam (ie Zosyn) has very little. Ceftriaxone is better. Cefepime is fine, although the prospect of cefepime neurotoxicity may make neurologists leery; ceftazidime is fine too. Add vancomycin (not necessarily for MRSA but for resistant Strep pneumo), acyclovir (for HSV), and a liberal approach to adding ampicillin for Listenia for anybody older, immunocompromised, or in the midst of an outbreak. * Dexamethasone has been shown to reduce hearing loss after Strep pneumo meningitis. If suspicion for meningitis is strong early, it’s reasonable to give early (before or concurrent with antibiotics). It’s probably not worth giving >24 hours later. * The main benefit of lumbar puncture is to allow stopping or narrowing antimicrobials without treating with the entire empiric cocktail for a full two weeks. (There is also the chance of identifying a resistance organism.) * Ideally, LP is done before antimicrobials. However, if non-culture-based diagnostics are available such as PCR panels, successful diagnosis can often occur even after antibiotic administration. It’s worth doing the LP even if late and no PCR is available, as the signature of protein, glucose, etc will often still be useful. (At least, up front in a patient who might have CNS infection, avoid creating new obstacles like loading them with anticoagulation, antiplatelets, low molecular weight heparin, etc.) * Most patients will already have a CT head performed before LP is considered, making the question of whether this is necessary (to assess risk of downward herniation) fairly moot. However, if not, it should probably be done prior to LP in anyone with an altered level of consciousness. * Order from all CSF: Gram stain and culture, cell counts (first and last tubes), glucose, protein, and HSV PCR. (VZV generally does not cause clinical meningitis per se, usually causing a meningitis vasculitis, e.g. in someone with small-vessel strokes.) If available, order PCR arrays too, although some centers may not run it unless the CSF WBC count is elevated (e.g. >5). In a patient with any immunocompromise, test for cryptococcus as well. Other immunosuppressed testing is case-specific. * Always measure opening pressure. This is not accurate in a patient sitting up. While technically possible to puncture a patient sitting up, then rotate them with assistance to lay flat, it’s not easy or elegant. In a sick patient, just do the LP laying down. * Remember that opening pressure is measured at the bedside in centimeters of water, but should be converted to millimeters of mercury to be...

    59 min

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Join us as we talk through clinical cases in the ICU setting, illustrating important points of diagnosis, treatment, and management of the critically ill patient, all in a casual, "talk through" verbal scenario format.

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