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8ème Symposium ALIAR "Update AINS"
Écrit par Daniel Wintersdorf Jeudi, 03 Juin 2010 08:24
1-Anesthesia is terribly simple but sometimes can be simply terrible
2-If you can’t manage the surgeon, you have no business managing the anesthetic.
3-There is a direct relationship between the number of tattoos and the propofol dose.
4-There is an inverse relationship between the number of tattoos and the tolerance to regional anesthesia.
5-There is an inverse relationship between a surgeon’s ability and the frequency that he/she asks for more muscle relaxant
6-There is no vital organ in the body that cannot be reached with a two-inch needle.
7-There is no condition that cannot be made worse by surgery (and/or anesthesia).
8-Every patient is a “preop” — it’s just a matter of figuring out for what!
9-Practice is the best of all instructors.
10-Numbers are tools, not rules.
11-Patients don’t die from their disease; they die from the physiologic consequences of their disease (Osler).
12-Levophed, or leave them dead.
13-If you can feel a pulse, don’t panic.
14-Fibrillation is a sign of life.
15-Be wary of patients whose risk exceeds their ejection fraction.
16-Treat the patient, not the monitor.
17-Never anesthetize a patient who isn’t there.
18-The more effective the case, the more selective your evaluation.
19-Chance of survival drops precipitously as the BUN exceeds the body weight.
20-The more the ECG resembles the EEG, the sicker the heart.
21-Never block pain that isn’t there.
22-It is much easier to add (drugs) then to subtract (them).
23-No block ever fails, some just have to be supplemented more than others.
24-Fifteen minutes spent preoperatively with a patient is worth 15 mg of morphine as a premedicant.
25-Experience is what you get when you don’t get what you want.
26-Experience is what lets you recognize your mistake the second time you make it.
27-Worry about the blood loss you hear
28-You need more venous access when the surgeon is operating near a blood vessel you can name.
29-When things go wrong, focus on the problem, not the blame.
30-The poor surgeon needs good anesthesia, the good surgeon deserves it.
31-Patients do not know or really do not care about your job description.
32-Safety first, but patient comfort and good will immediately behind.
33-Never promise a patient anything that is not in your power to provide
34-A patient is not always right but is never wrong (perhaps uninformed, uneducated or ignorant, but not wrong).
35-Watch carefully what you do.Function before beauty (or style).
36-The lesser the indication, the greater the complication.
37-The patient is the most important person in the operating room.
38-Treat every patient as you would like to be treated.
39-Always be mindful of the “person” in the patient.



