https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-dwbfk-1a26ed3
In Episode 129 of The Pharm So Hard Podcast, host Jimmy Pruitt, PharmD, BCPS, BCCCP, BCEMP, takes on one of the most common—and most consequential—errors in emergency care: how we give IM epinephrine for anaphylaxis. Spoiler alert: if you’re giving it in the arm, you may be giving your patient little more than saline. Using real EMS-to-ED scenarios and landmark pharmacokinetic data, Jimmy breaks down why IM epinephrine in the deltoid fails, how thigh administration delivers up to 10-fold higher plasma concentrations, and why many adults are being significantly underdosed with the standard 0.3 mg approach. This episode dives into absorption physiology, weight-based dosing, needle length, and the dangerous downstream consequences that occur when inadequate IM therapy pushes teams toward risky IV epinephrine boluses. If you manage anaphylaxis in the ED, ICU, or prehospital setting, this episode will fundamentally change how you think about epinephrine. The takeaway is simple—and non-negotiable: don’t try to outsmart physiology. Don’t ask why. Give it in the thigh.
