The hard part about playing chicken is knowing when to flinch – Bart Mancousco, The Hunt for the Red October
Epiglottitis is often a game of chicken. The great majority of adult patients don't require intubation, so the best management for them is steroid and antibiotic (plus close observation and the ability to intubate if necessary). For these patients, intubation isn't protective – it's dangerous. However, some patients do truly require intubation – which can often be difficult and require cricothyrotomy.
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The IBCC chapter is located here.
- The podcast & comments are below.
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- PulmCrit Wee: Rational selection of infusion rate based on loading dose - June 25, 2024
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Hi Josh,
Thanks for the helpful summary.
I think scenario 2 should say for the non-crashing *epiglottitis* patient (not anaphylaxis) though I appreciate that many of the principles are the same.
thanks! fixed it. Yep I borrowed some of this material from the IBCC chapter on angioedema.
Very use full