Adenosine Long
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- Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
- Try this if you like using a 3-way stopcock to administer adenosine: instead of swiveling the stopcock between syringe pushes, put it in the “all ports open” position. First give the adenosine, then the flush. No swiveling needed. Remember to hold pressure on the flush syringe while the adenosine goes in, or the adenosine can back up into the flush syringe. Then hold pressure on the adenosine syringe when flushing.
I got that once in my vene. It feels like you are riding rollercoaster while lying on bed
Really?
@mayoor yeah it stops your heart for a few seconds
@@MAY00R Yes. As Haytam said, it stops your heart for 4-7 seconds. You feel a huge amount of adrenalin, dizzy in your head and a unknowm feeling in your body. But it is not bad as a real stress, or as emotional injury. Its just a few seconds of disorientation.
@@AVMermaid Yeah. Thats what i felt kinda too.😁 I might get this injection more than once. In case of another attack, i will have to get it to stop the attack. ://
@@AVMermaid Thanks man 👍 It wasnt that scary. The biggest amunt of my problem was that dizzy feeling, it was like i am on some drugs and i hate beeing on any drugs lol.
Wow ive never seen that, it looks scary as hell when the heart rate drops from 170+ to flatline in an instant 🤯
Felt like i was dying and in that scene from trainspotting where hes sinking through the floor
Yup. Lights out. All of reality was like a lightbulb quickly fading into the distance, then you're back
Any time i have a SVT attack i'm always given adenosine, its the only thing that works for me. The sensation though is kinda hard to describe, for me it kinda feels like something starts crushing my entire chest cavity then all of a sudden it releases and i feel my heart rythem go back to normal. My heart beat though during attacks go well above 220bpm even one time hit 235bpm, scary stuff when that happens
My first SVT attack happened yesterday while my dad and I were at the movies. My heart randomly just felt like it was palpitating so I checked my watch and it was at 210bpm by the time we got to urgent care (20min) it had gone up to 240. They called an ambulance and the highest it got to was 253 right before they administered the adenosine. The best way I can explain the shot was like you’re going down a roller coaster, and you feel that G force against your body. Felt like my soul came out and went back in but thank God it worked like a charm. I felt completely normal literally 30 seconds after.
@@KaitlynMcCary It is quite a strange feeling the adenosine isn't it. Im glad your feeling better, hopefully your doctors get you in contact with a cardiologist and set you up on some medication, me personally i use verapamil hydrochloride, flecainide acetate and metoprolol tartrate which helps keep my SVT in check, i haven't had such an episode for over 2 years now
I’ve heard it feels horrible. Best wishes to you both.
My heart literally skipped a beat watching a flat line
Have you tried turning them off and on again? The drug
I learned about adenosine in ACLS and have always wanted to either use it or have it used on me.
Are you also curious about that weird effect? I think this may literally be how it feels to die.. just that.. well, you dont come baxk from it and the feeling continues until youre completely gone.. of course only if you die like that, with youre heart stopping, most deaths do take place when unconcious i would guess, so i dont know. What do you think?
@@Ahayeahishere sorry it took a bit to get back, I do think it's the closest, safest way to be near death, but the brain isn't dying so it would be short of an actual near death experience. The impending doom feeling would be unsettling at the least but still feeling your heart stop beating even for a few seconds would be memorable if fully conscious when it happened
@@justaguy5770 glad im not alone, litreally just watched the same short and searched for what people feel like when given the procedure, i want to experience it too! but i feel like we are talking like drug addicts here rn.
Simple and effective
Anyone else watch that EMT skit?
To the MDs here - what is the effectiveness between using Vagal maneuver and administering adenosine?
Adenosine way more effective. Vagal stimulation rarely works. From my 10 yr experience
@@nerddoctor8505i had someone say vagal works 80% of the time when done completely right
Wow this is so cool
Thank you
Dont know if i got this but i got in the hospital cz i worked out to much without earting or drinking, my hr got around 200 for the entire night and the tomorow, painfull
Seek emergency assistance asap in those instances
That looks like the cardiac version of hitting control alt delete.
Have you tried turning it off and on again😅
How did you push the flush so effortlessly? When I did this for my first time yesterday (to a real patient), the flush was so hard to push, I don't think I was able to push it fast enough and it didn't work
My first time having this, the nurse couldn't push it all the way. I got half the amount and KO'd, then woke up and had to do it again 20 minutes later. And it didn't work, so I was defibbed anyhow
I saw one nurse press the flush against their own body instead of just using their thumb so you're not the only one to struggle. I suppose use whatever leverage you can.
I have heard adenosine cardioversion is rough and have only chemically cardioverted others and been chemically cardioverted, myself, with other drugs. Such experiences are definitely not fun.
Wait... doesn't adenosine increase your heart rate?
Edit: Nevermind, I was thinking about atropine.
And then elevate the limb
Scariest drug to administer.
I would shit my pants every time
I have asthma and I had a bad reaction to albuterol that made my heart rate super high but I knew if I went to the hospital they’d have to restart my heart so I was like “nah ima ride this out” and it sucked but shit like this is scary lol.
💕
Dont worry people who hasent realised
Its a pupet look at the nails
You do realise this is a real treatment and is being done to thousands of people right
@@dominictoretto6234 Yea in trying to reassure people cause that video is indeed really stressful
@@leotseringmakes no sense. Misinformation and lying is always wrong
@@Ahayeahishere ??? Your assuming I'm lying cause the puppet is realistic
?
That isn't a puppet its an actual human,else why would he give adenosine to a puppet
I hate adenosine. Did nothing for me after two doses of that bullshit. 😒✋🏻