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Pediatric advanced life support

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PALS Basics - The First Few Seconds

Pediatric Assessment Triangle (PAT) diagram

  • Initial Impression (First 60s): Use the Pediatric Assessment Triangle (PAT) to assess severity.

    • Appearance: Tone, Interactiveness, Consolability, Look/Gaze, Speech/Cry (📌 TICLS).
    • Work of Breathing: Rate, retractions, abnormal sounds.
    • Circulation to Skin: Pallor, mottling, cyanosis.
  • Immediate Sequence:

⭐ If pulse is <60/min with poor perfusion despite oxygenation & ventilation, START chest compressions.

Bradycardia & Tachycardia - When the Heart Skips

  • Bradycardia (HR <60/min): Primarily caused by hypoxia. Always manage Airway & Breathing first.

    • If HR remains <60/min with poor perfusion despite oxygenation & ventilation, start chest compressions.
    • Epinephrine IV/IO: 0.01 mg/kg.
    • Atropine IV/IO: 0.02 mg/kg (for ↑ vagal tone).
  • Tachycardia: Differentiate by QRS duration.

  • Key Doses:
    • Adenosine (SVT): 0.1 mg/kg (1st dose), then 0.2 mg/kg.
    • Synchronized Cardioversion: 0.5-1 J/kg, then 2 J/kg.

⭐ The most common cause of pediatric bradycardia is hypoxia. Unlike adults, it is rarely a primary cardiac event.

Pediatric ECG: SVT vs. VT Comparison

Pulseless Arrest - Code Blue, Tiny Human

ECG: Normal Sinus Rhythm to Ventricular Fibrillation

  • CPR: High-quality compressions (100-120/min, depth ⅓ AP diameter) & ventilation.
  • Shock (VF/pVT): Start at $2$ J/kg, may escalate up to $10$ J/kg.
  • Epinephrine: $0.01$ mg/kg IV/IO (0.1 mL/kg of 1:10,000) q 3-5 min.
  • Amiodarone: $5$ mg/kg bolus for refractory VF/pVT.
  • Reversible Causes: Address H’s & T’s (Hypoxia, Hypovolemia, etc.).

⭐ In children, pulseless arrest is most commonly caused by respiratory failure or shock (asphyxial arrest). Asystole/PEA are the most frequent initial rhythms.

PALS Pharmacology - The Potion Cabinet

  • Epinephrine (Adrenaline): 0.01 mg/kg IV/IO for cardiac arrest. For bradycardia, anaphylaxis.
  • Amiodarone: 5 mg/kg IV/IO bolus for shock-refractory VF/pVT.
  • Lidocaine: 1 mg/kg IV/IO as an alternative to amiodarone.
  • Adenosine: 0.1 mg/kg rapid IV push (1st dose); 0.2 mg/kg (2nd dose) for SVT.
  • Glucose: 0.5-1 g/kg IV for hypoglycemia (use D10W/D25W).

⭐ For endotracheal administration, the epinephrine dose is much higher: 0.1 mg/kg (using the 1:1000 concentration).

Post-ROSC Care - After the Storm

  • Optimize Ventilation/Oxygenation: Maintain SpO₂ 94-99%; avoid hyperoxia. Target normocapnia (ETCO₂ 35-45 mmHg).
  • Hemodynamic Support: Maintain systolic BP >5th percentile for age. Give crystalloid boluses (10-20 mL/kg); start vasopressors (epinephrine/norepinephrine) if needed.
  • Neurological Care: Treat seizures promptly. Initiate Targeted Temperature Management (TTM) for comatose patients (32-36°C for 24 hrs).
  • Monitoring: Continuous ECG, BP, SpO₂, ETCO₂, temperature. Monitor and correct glucose and electrolyte abnormalities.

⭐ Actively prevent and treat fever (>37.5°C) in all post-arrest patients, as hyperthermia is linked to worse neurological outcomes.

Pediatric Post-ROSC Care Algorithm

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • PALS prioritizes the C-A-B (Compressions-Airway-Breathing) sequence.
  • Deliver high-quality chest compressions at 100-120/min to a depth of at least ⅓ the AP diameter of the chest.
  • The compression-to-ventilation ratio is 30:2 for a single rescuer and 15:2 for two rescuers.
  • For shockable rhythms (VF/pVT), the initial defibrillation dose is 2-4 J/kg; subsequent doses can be increased up to 10 J/kg.
  • The standard Epinephrine dose (IV/IO) is 0.01 mg/kg.
  • Consider Amiodarone or Lidocaine for refractory VF/pVT.
  • Always identify and treat the reversible causes (the H’s and T’s).

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