Turner Joseph S, Ellender Timothy J, Okonkwo Enola R, Stepsis Tyler M, Stevens Andrew C, Eddy Christopher S, Sembroski Erik G, Perkins Anthony J, Cooper Dylan D
Department of Emergency Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, 720 Eskenazi Avenue, Fifth Third Faculty Office Building, 3rd Floor Emergency Medicine Office, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, USA.
Carolinas Medical Center Emergency Medicine Residency, Medical Education Bldg., Third Floor 1000 Blythe Blvd., Charlotte, NC, 28203, USA.
Intern Emerg Med. 2017 Jun;12(4):513-518. doi: 10.1007/s11739-016-1481-z. Epub 2016 Jun 14.
There are a number of potential physical advantages to performing orotracheal intubation in an upright position. The objective of this study was to measure the success of intubation of a simulated patient in an upright versus supine position by novice intubators after brief training. This was a cross-over design study in which learners (medical students, physician assistant students, and paramedic students) intubated mannequins in both a supine (head of the bed at 0°) and upright (head of bed elevated at 45°) position. The primary outcome of interest was successful intubation of the trachea. Secondary outcomes included log time to intubation, Cormack-Lehane view obtained, Percent of Glottic Opening score, provider assessment of difficulty, and overall provider satisfaction with the position. There were a total of 126 participants: 34 medical students, 84 physician assistant students, and 8 paramedic students. Successful tracheal intubation was achieved in 114 supine attempts (90.5 %) and 123 upright attempts (97.6 %; P = 0.283). Upright positioning was associated with significantly faster log time to intubation, higher likelihood of achieving Grade I Cormack-Lehane view, higher Percent of Glottic Opening score, lower perceived difficulty, and higher provider satisfaction. A subset of 74 participants had no previous intubation training or experience. For these providers, there was a non-significant trend toward improved intubation success with upright positioning vs supine positioning (98.6 % vs. 87.8 %, P = 0.283). For all secondary outcomes in this group, upright positioning significantly outperformed supine positioning.
在直立位进行口气管插管有许多潜在的身体优势。本研究的目的是测量经过简短培训的新手插管者在直立位与仰卧位对模拟患者进行插管的成功率。这是一项交叉设计研究,学习者(医学生、医师助理学生和护理人员学生)在仰卧位(床头角度为0°)和直立位(床头抬高45°)对人体模型进行插管。感兴趣的主要结果是气管插管成功。次要结果包括插管记录时间、获得的Cormack-Lehane视野分级、声门开口百分比评分、操作者对难度的评估以及操作者对该体位的总体满意度。共有126名参与者:34名医学生、84名医师助理学生和8名护理人员学生。仰卧位插管尝试114次成功(90.5%),直立位插管尝试123次成功(97.6%;P = 0.283)。直立位与显著更快的插管记录时间、获得I级Cormack-Lehane视野的更高可能性、更高的声门开口百分比评分、更低的感知难度以及更高的操作者满意度相关。74名参与者的一个子集之前没有插管培训或经验。对于这些操作者,直立位插管成功率与仰卧位相比有改善的趋势但不显著(98.6%对87.8%,P = 0.283)。对于该组的所有次要结果,直立位明显优于仰卧位。