Re: THAM solution
I think I used THAM once in the ICU, not seen it used yet in my time as a CRNA. My understanding of THAM was that, like you said, it is like a bicarb gtt, but it doesn't metabolize back into CO2. If you give bicarb to anyone on an end tidal CO2 monitor, you will see just how much bicarb converts into CO2 by the spike in etco2. In the big picture, bicarb is a short term solution for base deficit that in the long run can actually contribute to acidosis. The theoretical benefit of Tham is that it shifts the bodies pH back toward 7.4 without CO2 as a biproduct (*I think). At one point I could do equations with avagadro's number and find how much co2 was contained in an amp of bicarb and stuff like that, but no longer. Anyway, this is just off the top of my head, so if I'm wrong, please correct me.
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