Interactive Transcript
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So you're on your way to meet the patient.
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So what should you consider pre-procedure?
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You want to understand the patient's history, right?
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You want to understand sort of a lay of the land so
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that you can meet this patient where he or she is.
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You're going to provide a focused
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physical examination, okay?
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Perhaps you're looking at the skin of this
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patient, um, in a patient that has high blood
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pressure and hyperlipidemia to see if there's
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any evidence of sort of tough, rough skin in the
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lower extremities, shiny skin, gnarled toenails.
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Maybe the patient has other findings that
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would sort of kind of clue you into other
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things that are happening with them, okay?
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Looking at their pulse examination as well
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would be sort of an important thing as you
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determine your access of where you're going to
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identify your access point, right?
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Common femoral artery sort of kind
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of being the most common site here.
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Imaging review, you want to make
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sure that you don't miss anything.
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You would look at all the sort of reference imaging,
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the cross-sectional imaging that is going to give you
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an important sort of understanding of your access,
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as well as the targeted focus for your intervention.
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Of course, labs are very important.
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We talk about sort of coagulation parameters.
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We're talking about creatinine.
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If you're going to have contrast, maybe you want to
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see if the creatinine is within the limits of normal.
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Of course, there's the BUN that in a patient that
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may have ESRD or sort of renal insufficiency,
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the BUN may be elevated in that sort of setting.
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Maybe there's uremic-related platelet
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dysfunction that may actually raise the
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bleeding risks associated with our procedure.
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So, informed consent is something that
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is often not talked about, but it's
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something that's extremely important.
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You know, what I often sort of get uncomfortable
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about is when my trainees say, yeah, I'm
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gonna get informed consent from the patient.
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Well, I don't know if that's really what we're doing.
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You know, informed consent is something
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that is really a shared understanding.
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It's a discussion to ensure that the patient
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understands and relays their understanding to
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you of what it relates to the perceived risk of
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the procedure, the alternatives to the procedure,
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and the anticipated clinical benefits.
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So, whenever we're sort of doing something of any great
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importance, the question is, do we have a checklist?
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You jump on a flight, I would hope to
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think that that pilot has a checklist.
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Both pilots have a checklist as they proceed.
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So too us, as clinicians, as interventionists, there
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should be a very clear checklist that we're ensuring
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that we key into as we prepare this patient.
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So, to hit patient history.
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So, the patient history is something that allows us
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to understand the patient's presenting complaints,
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the past medical history, the surgical history,
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their allergies, their medications, all this little
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sort of clinical milieu that then allows us to
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understand the symptomatology, and the onset, the timing.
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And of course, for us, has the patient
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received an assessment previously?
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And then the ultimate question here
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is, is this procedure indicated?
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So that's the question that needs to be answered
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after we perform the clinical assessment.
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Now, then we proceed to the physical examination.
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So, you know, one of the most important
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things is, you know, direct relative, is we're
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trying to get access, we need a patent vessel.
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How do we determine a patent vessel?
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Well, one of the things is checking pulse examination.
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Okay, checking pulse examination at
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the site as well as distal to the site.
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So, if we're getting common femoral artery access,
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well, maybe you want to check also popliteal.
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Maybe you also want to check the DP and the PT,
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the posterior tibial artery and the dorsalis pedis artery.
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Okay.
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And then, you know, you may actually do a little
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Doppler, you know, just to sort of make sure that,
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you know, you, you know, you, maybe the fingers
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are, are not feeling, uh, so sensitive today.
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All right?
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So you can mark those pulses now so that
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the individual that comes after you
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in prepping the patient is very clear and
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doesn't have to sort of reproduce that work.
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Or they can go straight to the access and they
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can monitor that and corroborate that finding.
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So again, here the question that needs to be
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answered is, does the PE (physical exam)
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is it contraindicate or confound the proposed intervention?
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102 00:04:02,830 --> 00:04:04,120 Alright, so imaging review.
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If you try to get access and you're like, "Oh,
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Doc, I'm a left-handed interventionist,
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and so I like to be on the patient's left side."
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Then I would say, "Okay, well, did you look at this
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image on your patient and see that this large,
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bulky calcification was precluding your access,
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whereas on the right side it's fairly open?
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Maybe this is a good patient to go on the right
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side if your routine access is on the left."
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So you want to be looking for vascular anatomy.
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You want to look at, sort of, modified anatomical
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considerations like the one we just noted.
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You want to look, sort of, at any variants
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that may complicate or contradict the
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procedure that you're about to perform.
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Alright, so at the end of the day, reviewing
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this prior imaging is particularly clutch.
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You want to look at your MRI, your CT scan, your
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ultrasound, any radionuclide scans that are going
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to inform, support, or corroborate, or confound
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your clinical assessment to the lab review.
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So one of the things that I think is extremely
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important is ensuring that you have the appropriate
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pre-procedure labs that may impact your intervention.
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And so, of course, we've touched on
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creatinine as it relates to contrast.
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We've touched on INR, and PTT, and platelet
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counts as it relates to, sort of, bleeding risks.
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There are other things, okay?
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And these things, sort of, allow us to guide
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decisions to use contrast and anesthesia choice
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in the case of potassium, if potassium
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is elevated. In many institutions,
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that may preclude conscious sedation.
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You may have to opt to perform a procedure that
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is supported by local anesthesia, lidocaine only.
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So at the end of the day,
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screening labs are recommended.
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And oftentimes in elderly patients or those
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with predisposing risk factors, you know,
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the main focus is on, sort of, renal function
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and coagulation status if we had to focus in.
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You know, there are Society of Interventional
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Radiology guidelines, and you want
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to be mindful of these guidelines.
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And these guidelines allow you to see, "Okay, you
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know what, I'm performing an arterial access.
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Alright, so I want to make
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sure that my INR is less than 1.5.
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Okay, I'm performing an arterial access,
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I want to make sure that my platelet count is
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greater than 50,000 or greater than 75,000."
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So you want to be very mindful of what you're
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doing and what, sort of, the standards of
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practice or the recommendations as it
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relates to coagulopathy and other lab values.
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So what I mentioned to you
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before was that informed consent
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is an outline in a language and manner that
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the patient can understand of the proposed
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procedure, the associated risks, the anticipated
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benefits, the known alternatives, and any
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particular uncertainties or possible adjunctive
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therapies you may anticipate being performed.
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There may, sort of, be an understanding
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of any contingencies that if something would occur
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during the procedure,
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you would employ.
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So, in the end of the day, you're not getting
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informed consent, like you're getting a gift
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for Christmas, and once you open it, it's yours.
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It's the kind of thing that, if the patient
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says they want to not perform this procedure,
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and they're about to get on the table,
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just because you're holding a consent doesn't
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mean that that procedure is going to happen.
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The patient is ultimately in control, and we need
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to respect, and most importantly, honor that.
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So, on to the pre-procedural checklist.
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So, the Cardiovascular Society in Europe
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has really sort of been particularly, sort of,
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on point as it relates to these checklists.
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And here's a beautiful checklist that was
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developed by CIRSE and actually validated.
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And one of the things that we want to, sort of,
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really be mindful of is, of course, MPO status.
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Check, did the patient eat right before the procedure?
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Well, if this is a necessary procedure,
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then maybe you want to move with lidocaine only.
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Or maybe the patient didn't eat, but,
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you know, maybe they had some nice whole milk,
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196 00:07:49,095 --> 00:07:51,465 you know, two hours before, well, maybe the
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procedure shouldn't be performed right now.
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Okay?
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Does the patient have IV access?
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Were there anticoagulation, you know, was that held?
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Does the patient actually have
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sort of known bleeding risks?
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Are there other considerations that we want
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to sort of really be mindful of as you prepare
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this patient for the intended vascular access?
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