Beautiful illustration. The clarity of talk is very good. Even the paramedical people can understand the terms very well. Since I am watching such medical programmes for the past several years this has some unique peculiarity. P.N.Mathew, Rtd Asst Director, VHSE
Thank you sir... One question A pt came to us with HR 45, BP 80/50 C/O chest pain and vomiting... We suspected it as an Inf wall MI and referred pt to higher center after giving tramadol, aspirine, clopido, atorva...(ECG was not available in our setup) In that case should we administer atropine or not? Means is atropine safe if pt is in acute attack of MI?
Sir, as this patient has hypotension won't we give crystalloid as I/V fluid of 20ml/kg body wt. to manage circulation? And what about the I/V fluid of choice if the patient is having bradycardia due to some toxin/sepsis?
Paediatric Bradycardia algorithm is different will do a video on that Doses/Details Epinephrine IV/IO dose: 0.01 mg/kg (0.1 mL/kg of the 0.1 mg/mL concentration). Repeat every 3-5 minutes. If IV/IO access not available but endotracheal (ET) tube in place, may give ET dose: 0.1 mg/kg (0.1 mL/kg of the 1 mg/mL concentration). Atropine IV/IO dose: 0.02 mg/kg. May repeat once. Minimum dose 0.1 mg and maximum single dose 0.5 mg.