The difficult airway: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:35, 2 February 2019
Predicting the difficult airway
ASA Difficult Airway Algorithm
- Does not necessary apply to the ED since the patient can always be awakened and case cancelled
- Cricothyrotomy should always be the last step in patients with failure to oxygen and ventilate with BVM and inability to intubate
- Straight blade- Miller- may offer better manipulation of a large epiglottis in children or for micrognathia or "buck teeth"
Improving Passive Oxygenation
Advanced airway adjuncts
Endotracheal tube introducer (ETI)/Gum Elastic Bougie
- Higher first pass success when used with direct laryngscope vs. styletted ET tube regardless of whether difficult airway was expected or not [1]
- Blind orotracheal intubation
Nasal intubation
- Not as successful but still an option
- Higher complication rate - bleeding, emesis, and airway trauma
- Do not attempt in patients with posterior pharyngeal swelling such as in Angioedema (Upper Airway)
Lighted Optical Stylets
- High success rate - especially good for trauma, c-spine precautions
- Use for both reg and nasotrach
- Lower complication rate
- Limited by fogging, secretion, recognition of anatomy, cost, and rare provider experience
LMA
- Can use without muscle relaxants
- Better than face mask
- Can be used as bridge to fiberoptic intubation
- Limited by unreliable seal at peak insp pressure
- Aspiration risk
- Mucosal trauma
- LMA better than endotracheal for paramedics, especially in pediatric patients[2][3]
- Intubating LMA (LMA-Fastrach) provides the opportunity to convert to a definitive airway after rescue with the supraglottic device
Combitube- esoph obturator
- Good for nurses and paramedics with limited intubation skill
- Indicated if difficult airway predicted: cannot see glottis with laryngoscope
- Reduced risk for aspiration compared to face mask or LMA
- Can maintain spinal immobilization
- Large size predisposes to esophogeal dilatation and laceration as a complication
Percutaneous transtracheal ventilation
- PTV
- Prefered over crithyrotomy in children up to age 10-12
- Needle, 16-18ga through cricoid membrane, connected to 50 psi 02[4]
- Oxygenates well
- Ventilate through glottis and upper airway - can retain CO2
- Need adequate oxygen pressure
- 1 sec insp and 2- 3 sec exp to avoid breath stacking
- Can use for 30-45 min
- May cause pneumothorax or barotrauma
- Contraindications
- Distorted anatomy
- Bleeding diathesis
- Complete airway obstruction
Retrograde Intubation
- Percutaneous guide wire through cricoid and retrograde intubation over wire
- Use guide catheter over wire and then ett
- Need time to set up
- Risk hematoma, pneumothorax
- Contraindicated
- Bleeding
- Distorted anatomy
Fiberoptic Bronchoscopic Intubation
- Takes time to set up
- Good for c-spine injury or awake patient with diff airway
- Go through nose
- Use for all ages, can give 02 during procedure thru fiberscope, immediate confirmation of position
- Limited by secretions, bleeding, poor suction,
Rigid Fiberoptic Laryngoscopes
- Use for diff airway or spinal immobolization
- Not as good and longer time to intubate than flex scope
Surgical cricothyrotomy
- Can get subglottic stenosis
- Rapid 4 step procedure faster but higher complication rate - cric cart fx
- Can also do wire guided
- Long term morbid, mortality similar to tracheostomy
See Also
Airway Pages
- Pre-intubation
- Induction
- Intubation
- Surgical airways
- Post-intubation
Mechanical Ventilation Pages
- Noninvasive ventilation
- Intubation
- Mechanical ventilation (main)
- Miscellaneous
Video
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References
- ↑ Driver, B. E., Prekker, M. E., Klein, L. R., Reardon, R. F., Miner, J. R., Fagerstrom, E. T., … Cole, J. B. (2018). Effect of Use of a Bougie vs Endotracheal Tube and Stylet on First-Attempt Intubation Success Among Patients With Difficult Airways Undergoing Emergency Intubation: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 319(21), 2179–2189.
- ↑ Zhu X-Y, Lin B-C, Zhang Q-S, Ye H-M, Yu R-J. A prospective evaluation of the efficacy of the laryngeal mask airway during neonatal resuscitation. Resuscitation. 2011;82(11):1405–1409. doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2011.06.010
- ↑ Calkins MD, Robinson TD. Combat trauma airway management: endotracheal intubation versus laryngeal mask airway versus combitube use by Navy SEAL and Reconnaissance combat corpsmen. J Trauma. 1999;46(5):927–932
- ↑ Beck, E., Kharasch, M., Casey, J., Ochoa, P., Menon, S., Calabrese, N. and Wang, E. (2011) ‘Percutaneous Transtracheal jet ventilation’, Academic Emergency Medicine, 18(5), pp. e38–e38.
