Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (37 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Alcohol Withdrawal
  • Poisoning, Toxidromes
  • Delirium
CODES
ICD9

307.9 Other and unspecified special symptoms or syndromes, not elsewhere classified

ICD10

R45.1 Restlessness and agitation

AIRWAY ADJUNCTS
David W. Schoenfeld
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Airway adjuncts are devices used for management of the upper airway
  • Often used as rescue techniques/devices when unable to intubate with standard techniques and difficult to mask ventilate
  • Oral and nasopharyngeal airways:
    • Lift tongue off hypopharynx
    • Combined with positioning aid in airway patency
    • Nasopharyngeal airway may be used when gag reflex intact
    • Oropharyngeal airway placement requires absent gag reflex
  • Extraglottic devices (EGD):
    • Supraglottic (SGD) class (i.e., LMA, PAXpress, CobraPLA, iGel, etc.)
    • These sit above and surround the glottis
    • Retroglottic (RGD) or infraglottic (IGD) class (i.e., Combitube, King tube, Ruch EasyTube, etc.)
    • RGD/IGD ventilate at the hypopharynx and occlude the esophagus
  • Blind insertion technique (specific to device)
  • Less protection from aspiration compared to ET tube
  • High success rates for placement of EGDs
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • 95% success with 1st method of airway management
  • 98% overall success of intubation
  • 4% of ED airways are difficult
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Physical Exam
  • Predictors of difficult to bag-mask ventilate (MOANS)
    • M – Mask seal (beards/structural abnormality)
    • O – Obese or obstructed
    • A – Advanced age (>55 yr)
    • N – No teeth
    • S – Stiff
  • Predictors of difficult laryngoscopy and intubation (LEMON)
    • L – Look externally
      • Micrognathia
      • Buck teeth
      • Large tongue
      • Short neck
    • E – Evaluate 3-3-2
      • Mouth opens <3 fingerbreadths
      • Horizontal length of mandible <3 fingerbreadths
      • Thyromental distance <2 fingerbreadths
    • M – Mallampati score (increasing difficulty)
      • Class I: Soft palate, uvula, fauces, pillars visible
      • Class II: Soft palate, uvula, fauces visible
      • Class III: Soft palate visible
      • Class IV: Hard palate only visible
    • O – Obstruction
      • Vocal changes/muffled voice
      • Difficulty managing secretions
      • Stridor
    • N – Neck mobility (limited)
  • Predictors of difficult cricothyrotomy (SHORT)
    • S – Surgery or disrupted airway
    • H – Hematoma or infection
    • O – Obese (access problem)
    • R – Radiation
    • T – Tumor
  • Predictors of difficult EGD (RODS)
    • R – Restricted mouth opening
    • O – Obstruction
    • D – Disrupted or distorted airway anatomy
    • S – Stiff lungs or cervical spine
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
  • Pulse oximetry should rise or remain at high level with successful airway management
  • Confirming correct placement:
  • Fiberoptic bronchoscopy (gold standard)
  • End tidal capnometry/capnography (>99% reliable)
  • Physical exam (common but unreliable)
  • Chest rise/fall
  • Auscultation of breath sounds with absence of sound over epigastrium
  • Condensation inside the ETT
  • Arterial blood gas is used to guide ventilator settings once airway established.
Imaging

CXR: Useful only in patients following endotracheal intubation to exclude mainstem bronchus intubation or pneumothorax and to adjust the position of the tube

ALERT

CXR does not rule out esophageal intubation

TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Options for patients requiring prehospital airway management vary by region and include:
    • Bag-valve-mask ventilation ± OPA or NPA
    • Orotracheal intubation (±RSI)
    • Nasotracheal intubation
    • EGD placement
    • Surgical airway
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Maintain in-line cervical spine immobilization in trauma patients
  • Oxygen (high flow via nonrebreather or BVM)
  • Vascular access (for resuscitation and medication administration) IV or IO
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Rapid sequence intubation
  • Prepare
    • Suction, BVM, ETT, primary airway management modality, rescue airway management modality, medications
  • Preoxygenate
    • NRB or BVM with 100% FiO
      2
      for 3 min
  • Pretreatment
    • Minimize adverse responses to airway management
    • Suspected elevated ICP
    • Ischemic heart disease or major vessel dissection/rupture
    • Adults with significant reactive airways disease
    • Children up to 10 yr of age
  • Paralysis with induction
    • Administration of induction agent
    • Rapid sequential administration of paralytic agent
ALERT

Paralysis is relatively contraindicated in anticipated difficult airway

  • Positioning
    • Head extension
    • Cricoid pressure (Sellick maneuver)
  • Placement of tube
  • Postintubation
    • Confirm ETT placement
    • Sedation with benzodiazepines, opiates, propofol, or other agents
    • Continued paralysis as needed combined with adequate sedation
  • Failed intubation
  • Consider other intubation techniques in failed airway algorithm or use of airway adjunct
  • Surgical airway as last resort
MEDICATION
  • Induction
    • Etomidate: 0.3 mg/kg IV
    • Ketamine: 1--2 mg/kg IV or 4–7 mg/kg IM
    • Midazolam: 0.07–0.3 mg/kg IV
    • Propofol: 2–2.5 mg/kg IV
    • Thiopental: 3 mg/kg IV
  • Paralysis
    • Succinylcholine: 1–1.5 mg/kg (peds: 2 mg/kg) IV, 2.5 mg/kg IM/SC
    • Rocuronium: 1 mg/kg IV (paralyzing dose); 0.1 mg/kg IV (defasciculating dose)
    • Pancuronium: 0.1 mg/kg IV (paralyzing dose); 0.01 mg/kg IV (defasciculating dose)
    • Vecuronium: 0.1 mg/kg IV (paralyzing dose); 0.01 mg/kg IV (defasciculating dose)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria

Almost all intubated patients should be admitted to an ICU or OR

Discharge Criteria

Rarely, ED patients who have been intubated may be extubated in the ED and discharged after a period of observation.

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
9.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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