CO₂ Absorber

The CO₂ absorber is the chemical device that removes this exhaled CO₂, allowing for low fresh gas flow (FGF) anesthesia. By scrubbing CO₂, it enables rebreathing of oxygen, volatile anesthetics, and inert carrier gases—conserving heat, humidity, and costly agents.

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The Circle Breathing System & Corrugated Tubing

The circle breathing system recycles exhaled gases, conserving heat, humidity, and agent. Its corrugated tubing is not just a hose—it provides kink resistance, low resistance, and circuit compliance. Master its seven components and you master safe ventilation, from pre-use check to troubleshooting leaks or CO₂ rebreathing.

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The pneumatic tourniquet

Pneumatic Tourniquet

The pneumatic tourniquet is a masterpiece of applied physiology and engineering. While it appears simple—a cuff, a pump, a gauge—its proper use demands vigilance. It saves lives and limbs not by being spectacular, but by being reliably controlled.

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Defibrillator / AED

defibrillator

The defibrillator is your definitive therapy for VF and pulseless VT in the OR. Know the difference: defibrillation (asynchronous, high energy) vs. cardioversion (synchronized). Turn it on, apply pads, charge to 120 J, call “CLEAR!”, and shock. Then resume CPR. Speed saves lives.

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Difficult Airway Cart

Difficult Airway Cart

The Difficult Airway Cart is your crisis response system, not a storage closet. Organized by the 4 D’s—primary, secondary, rescue, and salvage—it provides rapid access to video laryngoscopes, bougies, supraglottic airways, and surgical cricothyroidotomy kits. Master its layout before an emergency strikes. Memorize. Drill. Survive.

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Peripheral IV Cannula

IV Cannula with different sizes and Color codes

Peripheral IV cannulation is the cornerstone of safe anesthesia. This guide covers gauge selection (with color codes), ultrasound-guided techniques, complication management, and site selection—from forearm to external jugular. Master these skills to ensure reliable access during induction, maintenance, and emergencies.

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Patient-Controlled Analgesia (PCA) Pump

Patient-Controlled Analgesia (PCA) empowers patients to self-administer opioid boluses, shifting pain control from the provider to the patient. For trainees, mastering PCA requires understanding its programmable parameters—demand dose, lockout, and basal rate—while prioritizing patient selection, vigilant monitoring for sedation, and integrating multimodal analgesia for optimal safety and efficacy.

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The Syringe Infusion Pump

Syringe Infusion Pump

In the intensive care units (ICUs) as well in the operating room, the syringe infusion pump is as essential as the laryngoscope. While it appears to be a simple device—a motor pushing a syringe—it is our primary tool for precision drug delivery

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