experience –
Vent experience or arterial line experience for ICU?Rating: (votes: 0) Both are needed; however, they can both be taught. Vents are more complicated than A-lines. With that being said, I see and deal with more vents than A-lines. Many times if the pts condition is poor, they will be on the vent as well as have a A-line for close monitoring. Comment:
Blood doesn't thicken. Why do I get so annoyed at the use of that term? It's bad enough we still use the term 'blood thinners' for anti-coagulants.At any rate, I agree that vent experience is harder to come by, and very valuable.
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Vents. Managing a patient on a vent is more preferable. Both are helpful, but vents are a necessity.Good luck
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Maybe I'm weird, but I find vents more intuitive than a-lines, as far as trouble shooting them. It's probably b/c I have all of 4 weeks' experience lol, and just have dealt with more vents thus far than a-lines. But, troubleshooting a vent alarm relies more on common sense whereas troubleshooting a poorly functioning a-line, I feel, requires more knowledge. high pressure alarm on vent: biting on ETT as compared to now why isn't this thing fast flushing like it ought to? lol. Is that really a square wave or is it dampened? So, out came the book after work lol.
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Vents!! An a-line is really nothing more than an IV cath in an artery plugged into a monitor.....very easy to learn about. Learn how to manage vents, alarms, trouble shoot, gasses, vent settings etc. would be much more valuable!
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Quote from Good Morning, GilMaybe I'm weird, but I find vents more intuitive than a-lines, as far as trouble shooting them. It's probably b/c I have all of 4 weeks' experience lol, and just have dealt with more vents thus far than a-lines. But, troubleshooting a vent alarm relies more on common sense whereas troubleshooting a poorly functioning a-line, I feel, requires more knowledge. high pressure alarm on vent: biting on ETT as compared to now why isn't this thing fast flushing like it ought to? lol. Is that really a square wave or is it dampened? So, out came the book after work lol.
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I been wanting information about this! I just got hired at a local ED , the .nrs assist in central lines and arterial lines, which I did not experience at my first place of employment ( medical students would run to a room and take over) and didn't forsee the need for this where can get a visual learning experience online? I went back to reading ,but can't see the whole picture. Cvp? SVO2?P.S.lease help.
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I realize there is more care involved with a vented patient, and that ventilators are more complex than a-lines. You level the transducer, zero the a-line and call it a day if it's working. I just find understanding the vent settings, etc, more intuitive than some other things in the ICU (pa lines for instance), but it could also be b/c I haven't had a patient with a PA line yet. It's apparently very rare in the MICU...that's more of a CVICU thing.
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