Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Shark Fin

We had an eighty-year COPDer with Sats in the 80's not moving too much air. We gave her two back to back combi-nebs and monitored her with capnography. It was the first time I used capnography on a COPDer.

Here are the wave forms. Keep in mind a slanted "shark fin" wave form shows the person is struggling to exhale through resistance. A more box like wave form shows no resistance. Here's a normal wave form and a bronchospastic wave form:




And here's our patient's wave forms, initially, during the first treatment(combi-vent, which bronchodilates) and after two treatments:



Way cool, I thought. It really shows how effective our treatment was. The woman felt much better and was breathing easy. The nurse was impressed that we had capnography. She asked what the funny looking cannula was for. We tried to show her the wave forms, but she just nodded, and it seemed to me the wave forms meant nothing to her. A couple weeks ago, they would have meant nothing to me, too.

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Only other call was for a woman with heartburn and a history of throat cancer.

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For more information on capnography:

Capnography