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variceal - billll
#11
"Resuscitation of a hemodynamically unstable patient begins with assessing and addressing the ABCs (ie, airway, breathing, circulation) of initial management. Patients presenting with severe blood loss and hemorrhagic shock present with mental status changes and confusion. In such circumstances, patients cannot protect their airway, especially when hematemesis is present. In these cases, patients are at increased risk for aspiration, which is a potentially avoidable complication that can significantly affect morbidity and mortality. This situation must be recognized early, and patients must be electively, not emergently, intubated in a controlled setting using cricoid pressure.

Once the airway is secured, the next step in evaluation is assessing the patient's circulation. Intravenous access must be obtained. Bilateral 16-gauge (minimum) upper extremity peripheral intravenous lines are adequate for volume resuscitative efforts. Poiseuille law states that the rate of flow through a tube is proportional to the fourth power of the radius of the cannula and is inversely related to its length (Corson, 2001). Thus, short, large-bore peripheral intravenous lines are adequate for rapid fluid infusion. A rough guideline for the total amount of crystalloid fluid volume needed to correct the hypovolemia is the 3-for-1 rule. Replace each milliliter of blood loss with 3 mL of crystalloid fluid. This restores the lost plasma volume. Patients with severe coexisting medical illnesses, such as cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, may require pulmonary artery catheter insertion to closely monitor hemodynamic cardiac performance profiles during the early resuscitative phase." - emedicine

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#12
So the answer is A?
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#13
Yes, the answer, according to the source, is A.
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#14
Option A is the most plausible option. The pt is unresponsive and vomits. Does this not ring a danger of aspiration? Intubation of the pt should come readily in mind.
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#15
Bill,

A very good question and explanation. I was hesitating between B and D. Thanks.
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#16
i will go for "D". this pt. might had aspir. pneum. The low BP and cold extremities might means blood loss. So find out the cause quickly first and he should've tolerate this BP currently. Variceal might be the cause of his low BP. Correct me if wrong.
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#17
I Agree with ALibi totally, the answer is A... Follow the ABC...
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