Code Blue Becca Maddox NURS 2205 Spring 2002 Code Blue - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Code Blue Becca Maddox NURS 2205 Spring 2002 Code Blue

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Code Blue Becca Maddox NURS 2205 Spring 2002 Code Blue Patient is either in respiratory or cardiac trouble Respiratory arrest quits or near quits breathing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Code Blue Becca Maddox NURS 2205 Spring 2002 Code Blue


1
Code Blue
  • Becca Maddox
  • NURS 2205
  • Spring 2002

2
Code Blue
  • Patient is either in respiratory or cardiac
    trouble
  • Respiratory arrest quits or near quits
    breathing
  • Cardiac arrest heart is in a rhythm that causes
    the cessation of effective circulation

3
Respiratory Arrest
  • Quits breathing
  • Start mouth to mouth if airway is open
  • Treat the cause - inc O2 delivery, med OD, inc
    secretions, diuretics, breathing tx
  • If long term treatment is needed, may need to
    intubate and possibly ventilate until treatments
    are effective
  • Monitor or move to a critical care unit

4
Cardiac Arrest
  • Identify no pulse
  • Identify rhythm treat rhythm
  • Then treat cause

5
What to Do
  • Call the code
  • Make sure patient is on a hard surface
  • Start BLS
  • Help arrives with the Code Cart
  • Place on monitor
  • Quick look with paddles and identify rhythm or
    initiate AED protocol
  • Code Team arrives
  • Follow ACLS protocols
  • Record events

6
Roles of Code Members
  • respiratory therapy - establish airway and
    breathing (O2, ambu, intubate)
  • nurse - places on monitor, shocks, CPR
  • nurse - starts IVs, pushes meds
  • nurse - documents
  • MD - directs code
  • crowd control

7
Things You Must Know About Your Patient
  • Past Medical History
  • Current Diagnosis
  • Electrolytes - especially K
  • Any significant lab values
  • Meds given that day
  • Any procedures that day
  • What to do if you just got to work and have not
    made rounds?

8
What is on a Code Cart?
  • Usually a rolling tool box with doors
  • Monitor and defibrillator
  • Airway/Breathing supplies
  • First line drugs
  • Second line drugs
  • IV and suction equipment
  • Paperwork

9
Placing on Monitor
  • You have to know what the rhythm is to be able to
    treat - shocking and drugs saves lives
  • Three lead monitor
  • Five lead monitor
  • Quick look paddles
  • Monitor that talk to you (AED)

10
Mechanical vs Chemical Codes
  • Mechanical - only CPR. Pt may be very specific
    about what they what done ie. intubation vs ambu
    bag
  • Chemical - only drugs with no CPR, no chest
    compressions

11
CODE RHYTHMS
  • Asystole
  • VT
  • VFIB
  • PEA Treat cause
  • Heart blocks that have ceased to have adequate CO

12
If Not a Shockable Rhythm
  • Continue CPR
  • Establish ventilation - ambu or intubate
  • IVs- large bore and near to the heart
  • Drugs

13
Defibrillation vs Cardioversion
  • Defibrillation Joules delivered at anytime of
    the cardiac cycle
  • Depolarizes all the myocardial cells at once in
    the hope to reorganize and allow the SA node to
    take over the role of pacemaker

14
How to Defibrillate
  • Conductive gel or pads
  • Charge paddles
  • Shock 200j check rhythm
  • Shock 300j check rhythm
  • Shock 360j check rhythm
  • Start CPR, establish ventilation, IVs drugs
  • Subsequent shocks will be 360j

15
Cardioversion
  • Delivers joules to terminate a dysrhythmia
  • Must have a QRS complex - which means the patient
    has a pulse
  • Joules delivered at the end of the QRS complex
    which causes ventricular
  • Usually deliver less joules
  • Never deliver the energy at the T wave could
    cause VT or VFib
  • Also called synchronized cardioversion

16
Cardioversion
  • Sedate the patient (IV conscious sedation)
  • Turn on synchronized knob on monitor
  • Protect airway and breathing
  • Rhythms that can be cardioverted AFib,
    Aflutter, VT with a pulse, SVT

17
Problems
  • Skinny vs heavy patients
  • Cant touch metal
  • Conductive gel or pads
  • Must place gel or pads around the heart
  • Can burn patient
  • If awake, patient does feel pain
  • Can produce a worse rhythm

18
Emergency Drugs
  • Standard protocols set up by the American Heart
    Association ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life
    Support)
  • Oxygen
  • Epinephrine Alpha and Beta stimulant given IV
    or ETT for VF, pulseless VT, asystole
    pulseless electrical activity in symptomatic
    bradycardia after atropine, dopamine and
    transcutaneous pacing severe hypotension,
    anaphylaxis
  • 1 mg every 3-5 minutes during resuscitation,
    follow each dose with 20 ml IV flush
  • Higher dose (up to 0.2 mg/kg) may be used 1 mg
    dose fails
  • Continuous infusion 30 mg in 250 ml MS or D5W,
    run at 100 ml/hr and titrate to response
  • Via ETT give 2 2.5 mg diluted in 10 ml NS
  • For profound bradycardia and hypotension give
    2-10 mcg/min (1mg in 500 ml NS to infuse at 1-5
    ml/min)

19
  • Atropine first drug for symptomatic sinus
    bradycardia can be given via ETT second drug
    after epinephrine or vasopressin for asystole or
    bradycardic PEA
  • For asystole and PEA give 1 mg IV push, repeat
    every 3-5 minutes to a max dose of 0.03 to 0.04
    mg/kg
  • For bradycardia give 0.5 to 1 mg IV every 3-5
    minutes as needed, not to exceed total dose of
    0.04 mg/kg
  • Down ETT give 2 to 3 mg diluted in 10 ml normal
    saline

20
  • Vasopressin
  • One time dose of 40 U IV push
  • May be used as an alternate pressor to
    epinephrine in the treatment of adult
    shock-refractory VF
  • May be useful for hemodynamic support in
    vasodilatory shock (septic shock)

21
  • Lidocaine - antiarrhythmic effect, decreases
    ventricular excitability without depressing the
    force of contraction, depresses phase 4 of the
    cell cycle
  • Used for VT VFib IV push followed by a drip
  • Initial dose 1 - 1.5mg/kg
  • May repeat 0.5 0.75 mg/kg every 5-10 minutes
    to max total dose of 3mg/kg
  • drip administered 1-4mg/min (30-50 mcg/kg/min)
  • May be given via ETT at 2 to 4 mg/kg

22
  • Dopamine - inotropic, cardiac stimulant,
    vasopressor
  • Second drug for symptomatic bradycardia (after
    atropine)
  • Use for hypotension (systolic BP lt 70 to 100 mm
    Hg) with signs and symptoms of shock
  • Alpha and Beta effects at low doses
  • Only alpha effects at higher doses (Dose limit
    20mcg/kg/min)

23
  • ISOPROTERENOL Pure Beta stimulant (IV push or
    drip)
  • Use cautiously as a temporizing measure if
    external pacer is not available for treatment of
    symptomatic bradycardia
  • Temporary control of bradycardia in heart
    transplant patients (denervated heart
    unresponsive to atropine)
  • Do not give with epinephrine can cause VT/VF
  • Mix 1 mg in 250 ml NS, RL or D5W. Infuse at 2 to
    10 mcg/min. Titrate to adequate heart rate
  • If used for torsades de pointes that is
    unresponsive to magnesium, titrate to increase
    heart rate until VT is suppressed

24
  • Pronestyl (Procainamide) - antiarrhythmic, slows
    heart rate, slows conduction
  • Useful for a wide variety of arrhythmias
  • May be used to treat PSVT uncontrolled by
    adenosine and vagal maneuvers if blood pressure
    stable
  • Stable wide-complex tachycardia of unknown origin
  • Atrial fibrillation with rapid rate in
    Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
  • Proarrhythmic, especially in setting of AMI,
    hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia
  • Must give 20 mg/min slow IV push until one of the
    following occurs
  • Arrhythmia suppression
  • Hypotension
  • QRS widens by gt 50
  • Total dose of 17 mg/kg is given
  • Maintenance infusion of 1-4mg/min
  • Used if Lidocaine doesnt work

25
  • Amiodarone - Used for a wide variety of atrial
    and ventricular tachyarrhythmias and for rate
    control of rapid atrial arrhythmias in patients
    with impaired LV function when digoxin has proven
    ineffective
  • Treatment of shock-refractory VF/pulseless VT
  • Treatment of polymorphic VT and wide-complex
    tachycardia of uncertain origin
  • Control of hemodynamically stable VT when
    cardioversion is unsuccessful
  • Use as adjunct to electrical cardioversion of
    SVT, PSVT
  • May be used for rate control in treatment of
    atrial fibrillation or flutter when other
    therapies are ineffective
  • May cause vasodilation and hypotension. May
    prolong QT interval
  • In cardiac arrest, given 300 mg IV push (dilute
    in 20 30 ml NS). Consider an additional 150 mg
    in 3 to 5 minutes. Maximum cummulative dose of
    2.2 g IV/24 hrs
  • For wide complex tachycardias may be given rapid
    infusion (150 mg IV over 10 minutes and repeat
    150 mg every 10 minutes as needed), slow infusion
    (360 mg IV over 6 hours 1 mg/min) or
    maintenance infusion (540 mg IV over 18 hours
    0.5 mg/min)

26
  • Verapamil
  • Alternative drug (after adenosine) to terminate
    PSVT with narrow QRS complex, adequate blood
    pressure and preserved LV function
  • May control ventricular response in patients with
    atrial fibrillation, flutter, or multifocal
    atrial tachycardia
  • Expect blood pressure drop caused by peripheral
    vasodilation. IV calcium is an antagonist that
    restore blood pressure in toxic cases
  • Use with extreme caution in patients receiving
    oral beta blockers
  • IV infusion 2.5 to 5 mg IV bolus over 2 minutes.
    Second dose 5 to 10 m if needed in 15 to 30
    minutes. Max dose 20 mg.
  • Alternative infusion of 5 mg bolus every 15 min
    to total dose of 30 mg.
  • In older patients, administer over 3 minutes

27
  • Sodium bicarbonate
  • Preexisting hyperkalemia
  • Preexisting bicarbonate-responsive acidosis (DKA)
  • Tricyclic, cocaine or diphenhydramine overdoses
  • To alkalinize urine in aspirin or other overdose
  • Prolonged resuscitation with effective
    ventilation
  • Upon return of spontaneous circulation after long
    arrest interval
  • 1 mEq/kg IV bolus. Repeat half this dose every 10
    minutes thereafter
  • If rapidly available, use ABG analysis to guide
    bicarbonate therapy

28
PEDIATRIC CODES
  • Heart wrenching
  • Same procedure followed as adults
  • Drug doses are by kg
  • Think respiratory not cardiac

29
Continue the Code for VT/VF
  • Epinephrine 1 mg IV
  • Shock 360
  • Lidocaine 1-1.5 mg/kg
  • Shock 360
  • Epinephrine 1 mg
  • Shock 360
  • Lidocaine or Pronestyl or Amiodarone

30
Asystole
  • Epinephrine 1mg Q3-5 mins
  • Atropine 1mg Q3-5 mins
  • Continue CPR

31
PEA
  • Epinephrine 1mg Q3-5 mins
  • Treat cause

32
Heart Blocks or Symptomatic Bradycardia
  • Atropine 1 mg (up to 3 mg)
  • Isuprel
  • Pacemaker

33
Back to the Code
  • Remember the patients down time - if you save
    the heart what about the patients brain
  • Remember what you are saying around patient and
    family members
  • Once code is over how do you feel
  • Comforting the family

34
Codes
  • How to document code procedures
  • Rhythm strips
  • Mortality rate
  • Post mortem care
  • Organ procurement
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