1 / 55

Procedurepalooza 2010 Day 2

Procedurepalooza 2010 Day 2. Jason Poston Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Department of Medicine University of Chicago. Source: ABIM Website 3/31/09 http://www.abim.org/certification/policies/imss/im.aspx#procedures. Goals. Remind you of what you already know

Télécharger la présentation

Procedurepalooza 2010 Day 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Procedurepalooza 2010Day 2 Jason Poston Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Department of Medicine University of Chicago

  2. Source: ABIM Website 3/31/09 http://www.abim.org/certification/policies/imss/im.aspx#procedures

  3. Goals • Remind you of what you already know • Encourage a systematic approach to procedures • Should we do it? • Will we get in trouble? • How do we do it? • What happens once we’ve done it?

  4. Thoracentesis

  5. Thoracentesis Indications Diagnostic • Has pleural effusion • May be something other than heart failure Therapeutic • Relief of dyspnea, oxygenation

  6. Thoracentesis Contraindications • Patient uncooperative • Skin infection • Effusion too small (<1cm) • Known complex pleural disease • May need CT, U/S guidance • Mechanical ventilation • Coagulopathy • INR > 2 • PTT > 2X ULN • Thrombocytopenia (<50K) • Platelet dysfunction (uremia, anti-platelet agents)

  7. Thoracentesis Complications • Pneumothorax • Hemopneumothorax • Hemorrhage • Re-expansion pulmonary edema

  8. Complications

  9. Thoracentesis Consent Preparation • Equipment • Positioning and Draping • Sterility Performance • Local anesthetic, including the periosteum • Walk the needle/catheter into the pleural space • Advance catheter, withdraw needle • Drain and collect sample • Sterile dressing

  10. Location, Location, Location Tomsen et al. NEJM 355:e16, 2006

  11. Rib Angle

  12. Vein, Artery, and Nerve Lac des Pleura V A N

  13. Please Note • Diagnostic thoracentesis does not help the patient • Nor does a diagnostic paracentesis • Nor a lumbar puncture • THESE ARE DIAGNOSTIC TESTS • WHAT YOU DO WITH THE RESULTS IS WHAT MATTERS TO THE PATIENT

  14. Transudate vs Exudate • Key initial step in differential diagnosis • Light’s Criteria for exudative effusion (any 1 of 3): 1) Pleural fluid/Serum total protein > 0.5 OR 2) Pleural fluid/Serum LDH > 0.6 OR 3) Pleural fluid LDH > 2/3 the upper limit of normal serum • 98% sensitive/83% specific for exudate • 25% of transudates characterized as exudates • Typically in patients on diuretics Light, Ann Intern Med 77:507;1972/NEJM 346:1971;2002

  15. Template Slide • Template Text Porcel and Light, Am. Fam. Physician 73:1211, 2006

  16. Lumbar Puncture

  17. Lumbar Puncture • Where is CSF produced? • Where is it stored? • What are some common indications and contraindications for an LP? • How do I perform an LP? • How do I interpret the results?

  18. Lumbar Puncture Indications Diagnostic • Infectious • Inflammatory • Oncologic • SAH Therapeutic • Anesthesia • Antibiotic administration • Chemotherapy • Pseudotumor cerebri

  19. Lumbar Puncture Contraindications • Cardiorespiratory compromise • Potentially increased ICP • Coagulopathy • Previous lumbar surgery

  20. Who needs a CT before their LP?

  21. CT indicated prior to LP • Altered mental status • Papilledema • Focal neurologic signs • Recent seizures • Immunocompromised • Elderly?

  22. Technique Consent Preparation • Equipment • Positioning • Landmarks Performance • Local anesthesia • Procedure • Opening Pressure • Specimen handling

  23. Positioning

  24. Landmarks

  25. Preparation • Mark desired point of entry • Sterile technique • Gloves • Gown • Clean area • Drapes • Local anesthetic

  26. Procedure • Insert needle with stylus in place • Bevel in sagital plane • Angle toward umbilicus (15 degrees cephalad) • Needle will pass through: • Skin and subcutaneous tissue • Supraspinous ligament (c) • Interspinous ligament (b) • Ligamentum flavum (a) • Epidural space • Subarachnoid space CSF!!!

  27. Opening pressure • Only obtained in lateral decubitus position • Attach stopcock to hub of needle • OP is highest number obtained by column • Normal is 9-18

  28. Lumbar Puncture Specimen Handling • Collect 3-4 mL per tube • Use fluid in manometer first! • Cell count and diff • Protein and glucose • Gram stain and Cx • Special testing (e.g. HSV PCR, VDRL, etc.)

  29. Lumbar Puncture Complications • Post LP Headache: ~25% • Back and radicular pain • Infection • Bleeding • CSF leak • Herniation

  30. Lumbar Puncture Interpretation of Results • Appearance • Opening Pressure • Cells • Protein • Glucose • Gram stain and culture • Other tests

  31. Normal CSF Results • Appearance • Clear, colorless • Opening Pressure • <19 • Cells • <5 WBCs, no RBCs • Protein • 15-45 • Glucose • ~2/3 serum • Gram stain and culture • Other tests

  32. Abdominal Paracentesis

  33. Paracentesis • Removal of intra-abdominal fluid through needle puncture of the abdominal cavity.

  34. Paracentesis Indications • Determine etiology of an intra-abdominal fluid collection. • Infection, hemorrhage, urine, or other • Relief of symptoms related to abdominal fluid collection. • Abdominal distention, shortness of breath, est.. • Unexplained encephalopathy

  35. Paracentesis Contraindications • Absolute • Profound hypotension • Relative • Coagulopathy • Renal dysfunction • Skin infection/Burns • Prior abdominal surgery

  36. Technique Preparation • Landmarks • Equipment • Performance Procedure • Local anesthesia • Performance • How much to take • Specimen handling

  37. Landmarks • Avoid the epigastric arteries and bladder.

  38. Preparation • Mark desired point of entry • Sterile technique • Gloves • Gown • Clean area • Drapes • Local anesthetic • Paracentesis tray

  39. Procedure • Insert needle through the skin and anterior abdominal wall, into the peritoneal fluid. • Z-line technique • Confirm aspiration of fluid • A catheter-over-needle assembly is used to place a catheter into the cavity for drainage. • Desired amount of fluid is drained • Catheter is removed and wound is dressed.

  40. Z-line Technique • Needle is inserted perpendicular to the skin • Tension is maintained on the skin while the needle is advanced through the abdominal wall. • Lowers the risk of bleeding or fluid leakage.

  41. Specimen handling • Cell count with differential • Protein, albumin, LDH • Bacterial culture/Gram stain • Cytology

  42. Interpretation of Results • Serum-ascites albumin gradient (SAAG) ≥ 1.1 g/dl → portal hypertension related < 1.1 g/dl → non-portal HTN related

  43. Complications • Bleeding • Persistent ascitic leak • Renal dysfunction • Transient Hypotension • Intestinal or bladder perforation • Localized infection at the puncture site • Abdominal wall blood clots or bruises • Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis

  44. Naso-Gastric Tube Placement

  45. Indications • Diagnostic • Evaluation of suspected upper GI bleeding • Aspiration of gastric fluid • Administration of contrast to the GI tract • Therapeutic • Gastric decompression • Administration of medications • Feeding • Bowel irrigation

  46. Contraindications • Absolute • Severe midface trauma • Recent sinus surgery • Recent gastric or esophageal surgery • Relative • Coagulation abnormality • Esophageal varices or stricture • Recent banding or cautery of esophageal varices • Alkaline ingestion

  47. Technique • Equipment • Positioning • Landmarks • Procedure • Confirmation

  48. Equipment • Adult 16-18F Salem sump tubing • Lubricant • Toomey Syringe, 60 ml • Tape • Emesis Basin • Suction Tubing • Wall suction

More Related