Basic items on a veterinary crash cart are: Epinephrine, Dopram, Atropine for adrenaline, iv catheter supplies, endotracheal tubes, bandaging materials, needles/syringes, etc. Basics that are needed to revive an animal without running from cabinet to cabinet.
This drug is often used for Grandmal seizures
adenocard, atropine, verapamil, calcium chloride, dextrose 50%, cordarone, epinephrine, lanoxine, furosemide, mag sulfate, prcainamide, sodium bicarb, lidocaine, dobutamine, dopamine, and nitroglycerin
To clear liquids out of the airway/mouth
ON THE TOP!!
It is also called a resuscitation cart or code cart
The 'crash cart' is hospital slang for the trolley that carries emergency defibrillation equipment and drugs in the event of a patient going into cardiac arrest. It is portable, and can be rushed to the patient's bedside in the event of emergency.
No! Atropine is commonly used with steroids after proper diagnosis.
adrenaline
There are a variety of emergency medications, including epinephrine and atropine as well as intubation materials. However, CPR and advanced life-saving procedures are rarely done on animals - they have a low chance of success and in many cases the animals are not at the veterinary clinic where the medications and veterinarian is available.
why is atropine used on an adult with severe head trauma and severed spinal cord?
atropine