🔑these have to be REALLY short to fit on the cards
🔑 pt-centered clarity is more important 💯 accuracy
🔑Setting: general ICU
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An order that prohibits CPR & restarting the heart when it stops beating. Often paired with Do Not Intubate (DNI), prohibiting the use of a breathing tube. Ordered after discussion with patient/family.
For patients on the ventilator, we routinely stop sedatives (medications which keep the patient asleep) to allow patients to wake up and try to breathe on their own, getting them off of life support faster.
Powerful medications that increase the blood pressure to maintain blood flow to vital organs. Vasopressors are a form of life support.
When the the heart or kidneys are not able to manage the body’s water balance, fluid accumulates throughout the body, including in the lungs.
Giving blood is easier than getting it; blood type must determined in advance Complications are rare, but may be serious.
When flesh is badly infected or dead (necrotic), it must be removed by surgeons to allow healthy tissue to thrive
Fluid can accumulate in the “pericardial sac,” a kind of envelope that surrounds the heart. A needle & catheter (tube) inserted through the chest into the sac drains the fluid.
When even mechanical ventilation is insufficient to get oxygen in the blood, ECMO can bypass the lungs (and sometimes the heart) to put oxygen directly into the blood.
Dialysis is life support that replaces the kidneys, removing excess water and toxins from the blood. In the ICU, we use a form of "continuous" dialysis that runs non-stop.
The focus of care switches from prolonging life to minimizing suffering and maximizing the patient's ability to achieve what is important to them at the end of life.
Medication to stop all control of movement is used in extreme cases to help the ventilator be as efficient as possible. Paralysis without sedation is torture.
A hole through your throat into your windpipe allows for long-term use of the ventilator.
Components of the blood that help it clot are taken from donated blood and given to patients who are bleeding with “thin” blood.
Removing the liquid part of the blood along with any antibodies in it can help treat a variety of inflammatory conditions.
Surgical removal of part of the skull, often used when pressure has built up inside the skull- e.g., from bleeding.
A tube is inserted into the windpipe and connected to a machine that breathes for you - oxygen in, carbon dioxide out.
A flexible tube with camera inserted through the mouth or nose into the airways to remove blood or pus and make a diagnosis.
A long "IV" catheter that starts in the neck or groin and delivers medications close to the heart.
The blood needs to be like Goldilocks' porridge- not too thin, not too thick. Not thin enough and you’ll clot; too thin and you’ll bleed.
A needle inserted into the spine to obtain fluid diagnostic for infections or other problems in the brain.
A Computed Tomography scan is a series of x-rays turned into a 3d picture of the body. It can tell us everything... or nothing.
A tube inserted through the nose into the stomach to drain blood/stomach contents or deliver nutrition.
An important way to understand the patient's goals priorities, preferences and values and to help the family understand the illness.
Sodium Bicarbonate Ampules: the blood's natural buffer, but a temporizing measure at best in the ICU.
Lots of oxygen, really fast: up to 80L/minute! Delivered through thick nasal prongs, often humidified
Using contrast dye, we can get map the blood vessels in the body, identifying blockages or leaks.
Steroids reduce inflammation, but don't always work as intended and have a host of side effects.
OTs are focused on skill-building, on helping a patient regain the ability to do basic tasks often lost when critically ill.
Critical illness often leaves patients so weak they need weeks or more of physical rehab. PT helps maintain strength from day 1.
Medications used to help regulate or normalize the immune system may increase your risk for infections.
In the ICU, RTs are round-the-clock patient-centered ventilator engineers that help with a variety of breathing therapies.
Social workers (MSW) support and advocate for patients & families & improve communication with the medical team.
Plastic catheters that go into the chest, often on the side, and drain fluid or air.
Nursing assistants provide much of the hands-on patient care in the ICU and elsewhere.
Once used ubiquitously in the ICU, invasive bladder catheters are uncomfortable and add a risk of infection.
Soft restraints are sometimes necessary to keep confused patients safe- but at what cost?
A machine creates a mist that dilates (opens up) the airways. For people with asthma, more than a breath of fresh air: it can be a lifesaver.
The liquid part of the blood filled with stuff that helps your blood clot better.
Insulin lowers the blood sugar. In the ICU, it often comes as a continuous IV "drip" into the bloodstream. Everyone who needs insulin should get it. #Insulin4All
A protein that can keep fluid from leaking out of blood vessels
Without nurses, there is no intensive care. The Charge Nurse changes each shift and has administrative responsibilities.
(How is that, #NurseTwitter?)
IV antibiotics are quicker and sometimes stronger than than oral antibiotics.
A test that measures brain activity, particularly to identify seizures.
It is essential to balance minerals like calcium, potassium, sodium, chloride, phosphate, and magnesium in the blood.
Another way to get pictures of the body that is somewhat safer than a CAT scan but usually takes longer. In the ICU, mostly useful for brain imaging.
what do you think, @DShadowgazer @RogueRad and others?