If you're in the position to provide Advanced cardiac life support, this is not too technical. If you're not a healthcare provider, you're likely looking for a description of 1% or 2% lidocaine topical or local anesthetic. Used in stitches, sunburn ointment, desensitization ointments
I just spent a week in hospital connected to a Lidocaine / lignocaine IV drip & it really assisted in calming my extremely painful Neuropathy / CIDP. My Neurologist Professor said this was a last resort treatment as I have not been responding to monthly IVIG.
Simplified English: Intravenous (needle into a vein) lidocaine has the same complications as opiates (ex: morphine) - both can knock a patient out or cause heart failure if administered too much or too fast.
If you're in the position to provide Advanced cardiac life support, this is not too technical.
If you're not a healthcare provider, you're likely looking for a description of 1% or 2% lidocaine topical or local anesthetic. Used in stitches, sunburn ointment, desensitization ointments
I just spent a week in hospital connected to a Lidocaine / lignocaine IV drip & it really assisted in calming my extremely painful Neuropathy / CIDP. My Neurologist Professor said this was a last resort treatment as I have not been responding to monthly IVIG.
Case inquiry: lidocaine patch vs Paraspinous lidocaine injection. Is one better (and if so, how much better) than the other?
I just wanna know if this will shut up a barking dog?
you sound like a bad owner
I know this is english. but i didnt understand half of what he was saying...
I understand it but you made it sound too technical.
cant follow this.
nice thank you!!
This shit sound like
a foreign language
What?
WHAT?!
OH FUCK THIS! I just wanted to know if it's for stiches.
Lidocaine is used to treat certain heart arrhythmias. It's also a analgesic. This channel is about Advanced Cardiac Life Support.
@@TheLoobis that’s what I use it for
@@timmynormand8082 But that isn't something I can buy over the counter right?
I drank the whole bottle
In layman’s term please?
Simplified English: Intravenous (needle into a vein) lidocaine has the same complications as opiates (ex: morphine) - both can knock a patient out or cause heart failure if administered too much or too fast.
@@robertkb64 That was really kind of you to explain. Thank you.
If you eat burnt cigarettes will it lower lidocaines effects?
I came here to know what lidocaine actually is ,but found this guy reading his blah blah written notes 😑😑😑
I get heart raise when they use it. I hate it.
But Xylocaine IS lidocaine haha
Speak English lol