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Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
Aaron Tjomsland
63 episodes
4 days ago
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.
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Medicine
Health & Fitness
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All content for Emergency Medicine Mnemonics is the property of Aaron Tjomsland and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.
Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness
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Push-dose Epi: One out, One in - Makes 10
Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
23 minutes 18 seconds
5 months ago
Push-dose Epi: One out, One in - Makes 10

How to Mix Push-dose Epi: One out, one in — makes ten


Goal concentration: 10 mcg/mL


Step-by-Step Mixing:

1. Start with a 10 mL syringe of normal saline (NS)

• empty 1 mL to retain 9 mL of NS in the syringe.

2. Use the code cart 1:10,000 epi (100 mcg/mL)

• This is the standard “cardiac arrest epi” amp (usually 1 mg in 10 mL)…the 1:10,000 prefilled syringe used during ACLS

3. Withdraw 1 mL of the 1:10,000 epi (this gives you 100 mcg) using 3 mL syringe.

4. Inject that 1 mL (100 mcg) into your syringe of 9 mL NS.

• Now you have 10 mL of epinephrine at 10 mcg/mL — ready to use.

So what we just did is the mnemonic: One out, one in — makes ten

⸻


• What’s the concentration of the code cart epi?

• How much do you withdraw?

• What do you inject it into?

• What’s the final concentration?


You should be able to say it out loud, now. If not — just repeat the podcast a couple of times to get it solid.


⸻


How to Administer:

• Dose: 1–2 mL IV push every 1–5 minutes PRN hypotension

• That’s 5 to 20 micrograms per dose — meaning 0.5 to 2 mL of your push-dose epi, depending on the patient’s response.

• Titrate to clinical effect (aim for MAP >65 or ROSC support)

Emergency Medicine Mnemonics
Most podcasts are about understanding. This emergency medicine podcast is about knowledge recall. Active learning requires your brain to process actively. Can you withstand sitting with the discomfort of being asked a question until you can answer it easily and readily? I promise you won’t be comfortable listening to each episode, but after you withstand the discomfort, your ability to recall, will be far superior than any other passive, listening.