Procedural Sedation and Analgesia - Part 1

Procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA) is the use of analgesic, sedative, and/or dissociative agents with the purpose of relieving pain and anxiety associated with a procedure.

It is well within the scope of the emergency physician and the aim of this post is to go over some key points as well as go over some of the most commonly used agents.

First thing to remember is that sedation is a spectrum and our goal state is determined by our indication for PSA including the duration of the procedure, and the level of pain/anxiety associated with the procedure.

We can then achieve our goal by careful selection of the proper agent, route, and dose.

Also take into account the patient’s age and comorbidities, including hepatic, renal, and cardiopulmonary insufficiencies.

For our purposes, PSA will only be referring to moderate sedation.

Our goal for PSA is to induce a state that allows a patient to tolerate unpleasant procedures while maintaining cardiorespiratory function by producing a depressed level of consciousness but allowing the patient to maintain airway control independently and consciously.

Before getting into the different agents, here are some definitions to be familiar with:

Analgesia:  Relief of pain without intentional production of an altered mental state such as sedation. An altered mental state may be a secondary effect of medications administered for this purpose.

Anxiolysis: State of decreased apprehension concerning a particular situation in which there is no change in a patient’s level of awareness

Dissociation: Trancelike cataleptic state in which the cortical centers are prevented from receiving sensory stimuli, but cardiopulmonary activity and responses are preserved.

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Can you guess which PSA agent was used on this pediatric patient?

Find out next time in our PSA POTD - Part 2!

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Calling Consults

Today’s post is more targeted towards the interns but may serve as a good refresher for everyone.

This is a skill that we as emergency physicians need proficiency with because it's as much a part of our job as intubating someone or putting in a central line.

Today we're talking about how to call a new consult!

Introducing the 5 Cs of calling a consult:

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I stick with pretty much the same format every time I call a new consult and I use the 5 Cs except that I like to bring up the timeframe/stability of the patient earlier on in the conversation:

Contact: Hello this is David calling from the ED. Who am I speaking with?

Communicate: Hi [name] I'm calling you for a new consult. I have a patient here who [I suspect of having/I'm concerned for/has] [diagnosis]. The patient's MRN/name/location are...

The patient is [stable for now/unstable].

This is a [age/gender] patient with [pertinent history/physical/labs/studies]. (Note: This is much less extensive then a presentation to an attending or a signout to another provider. You're providing the consultant with just the key information).

Core Question: Could you please evaluate this patient for [admission/procedure/other] (Note: Most of the time the reason for the consult will be obvious to the consultant but you should know why you are calling the consult).

Do you have any questions/need any other information at this time?

Collaboration: What can I do before you come see the patient to help expedite things?

Closing the Loop: My callback is x5555. I'll go ahead and order those extra labs you suggested. Thank you. See you in a bit.


The easier you make the work for the consultant, the happier everyone will be and the easier the work will be for you.

Just a few more tips/reminders:

1) Consultants are exactly what they sound like...they are consultants. This means that just because they provide certain recommendations, it does not mean that you have to follow their plan blindly. Having a consultant on board is a way to ask for help that leads to shared responsibility and collaborative decision-making, so if you don't agree with certain recommendations, you are still in charge of the plan.

2) Calling a consultant doesn't mean you're passing your patient over to someone else. They're still your patients and you are responsible for their care until they are dispositioned and out of the ED.

3) It helps if you speak the 'language' of the consultant and can predict the specific information they require to evaluate the case. This comes with experience and you will learn what this information is with the more consults you call.

Great informational video: https://youtu.be/YHCRluo6MM4

And if that's not enough, here's another cool mnemonic you could use to help you in your consult-calling journey:

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source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4507900/


Welcome to Emergency Medicine :)

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Traumatic Arthrotomy

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What is it? It’s a deep laceration that extends into the normally sterile intra-articular joint space and places the joint at risk of septic arthritis. The knee is the most commonly involved joint. Young adult males most at risk for traumatic arthrotomies. Think about high energy injuries like MVAs and falls from a significant height, and penetrating trauma (GSW, knives, sharp metal).

Why does it matter? Risk of significant functional impairment. Primary wound closure vs. operating room for emergent washout.

Usually local wound exploration is sufficient for diagnosing it or if it’s just obvious like in the picture above with the bone and/or tendon sticking out. Other times, you might look for air bubbles or extravasation of joint fluid which is apparently straw colored.

Where it gets interesting is if you are clinically unsure if the laceration violates the joint space. There’s been some limited data on x-rays and CT looking for intra-articular air as a sign of joint violation but the studies are small and it’s not the gold standard.

The standard tool for assessing traumatic arthrotomies, and what we do here, is the saline or methylene blue load test. These are the steps:

-          Arthrocentesis of the joint

-          Inject sterile saline or methylene blue while passive movement is applied to the joint

-          Observe the laceration site for extravasation

-          Sensitivity increases with more volume injected but so does the pain

Arthrocentesis of knee: You can enter from almost any direction, with the medial/lateral approach being the most common while the knee is fully extended.

Start at about the 1:58 mark https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8idT6fwU0Q&feature=emb_title

Remember, give antibiotics early, update tetanus, get orthopedics consult early on especially if there is uncertainty.

 Sources

https://coreem.net/core/traumatic-arthrotomy/

https://wikem.org/wiki/Arthrocentesis:_knee

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