Intubation

Revision as of 09:33, 14 May 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Indications

  1. Failure to ventilate
  2. Failure to oxygenate
  3. Inability to protect airway (gag unhelpful)
  4. Anticipated clinical course (anticipated deterioration, transport, or impending airway compromise)
  5. Increased ICP (for hyperventilation)
  6. Combative, needing imaging

Difficult BVM (MOANS)

  1. Mask seal
  2. Obesity
  3. Aged
  4. No teeth
  5. Stiffness (resistance to ventilation)

"Remove dentures to intubate; keep them in to bag/mask ventilate"

Difficult Intubation

  1. Look externally (gestalt)
  2. Evaluate 3-3-2 rule
  3. Mallampati
  4. Obstruction
  5. Neck mobility

Laryngoscopy Grades (Cormack & Lehane)

Grade
View
Failure Rate
I
whole aperture 0%
IIa
ayretenoids +partial cords 4%
IIb
ayretenoids only 67%
III
epiglottis only >67%
IV
no epiglottis ?%

==Severe Metabolic Acidosis

Nasal Intubation

  1. sniffing position (like oral ET)
  2. pretreat with lido, hurricaine, or 4cc nebulized lidocaine for 5 minutes
  3. Tube size = 1.0 mm smaller
  4. listen with stethoscope at end of tube (breath sounds become louder as tube approaches cords)
  5. when tube hits cords patient will cough, back up 1 or 2 cm. wait for beginning of inspiration, as patient begins inspiration advance 3-4 cm (tube should be 22-26cm in women, 23-28cm in men)

tips: occlude other nostril to hear better, cricoid pressure when advancing, use a small suciton catheter as a seldinger guide, precurve tube before insertion.

See Also

Difficult Airway Algorithm

Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI)

Source

Rosen EMCrit #3