PhD Candidate, Department of Paramedicine, SPAHC, University of Monash; Staff Specialist, Prehospital & Retrieval Medicine, Sydney HEMS, NSW Ambulance; Aeromedical Retrieval, New South Wales Ambulance, NSW, Australia.
Registrar Prehospital & Retrieval Medicine, Sydney HEMS, NSW Ambulance, NSW, Australia.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2022 Aug;37(4):485-491. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X22000851. Epub 2022 Jun 3.
Structured review of video laryngoscopy recordings from physician team prehospital rapid sequence intubations (RSIs) may provide new insights into why prehospital intubations are difficult. The aim was to use laryngoscope video recordings to give information on timings, observed features of the airway, laryngoscopy technique, and laryngoscope performance. This was to both describe prehospital airways and to investigate which factors were associated with increased time taken to intubate.
Sydney Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS; the aeromedical wing of New South Wales Ambulance, Australia) has a database recording all intubations. The database comprises free-text case detail, airway dataset, scanned case sheet, and uploaded laryngoscope video. The teams of critical care paramedic and doctor use protocol-led intubations with a C-MAC Macintosh size four laryngoscope and intubation adjunct. First-pass intubation rate is approximately 97%. Available video recordings and their database entries were retrospectively analyzed for pre-specified qualitative and quantitative factors.
Prehospital RSI video recordings were available for 385 cases from January 2018 through July 2020. Timings revealed a median of 58 seconds of apnea from laryngoscope entering mouth to ventilations. Median time to intubate (laryngoscope passing lips until tracheal tube inserted) was 35 seconds, interquartile range 28-46 seconds. Suction was required prior to intubation in 29% of prehospital RSIs. Fogging of the camera lens at time of laryngoscopy occurred in 28%. Logistic regression revealed longer time to intubate was associated with airway soiling, Cormack-Lehane Grade 2 or 3, multiple bougie passes, or change of bougie.
Video recordings averaging 35 seconds for first-pass success prehospital RSI with an adjunct give bed-side "definitions of difficulty" of 30 seconds for no glottic view, 45 seconds for no bougie placement, and 60 seconds for no endotracheal tube placement. Awareness of apnea duration can help guide decision making for oxygenation. All emergency intubators need to be cognizant of the need for suctioning. Improving the management of bloodied airways and bougie usage may reduce laryngoscopy duration and be a focus for training. Video screen fogging and missed recordings from some patients may be something manufacturers can address in the future.
对来自医生团队院前快速序贯插管(RSI)的视频喉镜记录进行结构化审查,可能会为我们提供新的视角,了解为什么院前插管如此困难。本研究的目的是使用喉镜视频记录来提供有关插管时间、观察到的气道特征、喉镜技术和喉镜性能的信息。本研究旨在描述院前气道,并研究哪些因素与插管时间延长有关。
悉尼直升机紧急医疗服务(HEMS;澳大利亚新南威尔士救护车的航空医疗部门)拥有一个记录所有插管的数据库。该数据库包含自由文本案例详细信息、气道数据集、扫描病例表和上传的喉镜视频。重症护理护理人员和医生团队使用基于协议的插管方法,使用 C-MAC Macintosh 大小 4 号喉镜和插管辅助工具。首次插管成功率约为 97%。回顾性分析了 2018 年 1 月至 2020 年 7 月期间可用的院前 RSI 视频记录及其数据库条目,以评估预定的定性和定量因素。
从 2018 年 1 月至 2020 年 7 月,共获得 385 例院前 RSI 视频记录。时间显示,从喉镜进入口腔到通气的时间,有 58 秒的呼吸暂停。中位插管时间(喉镜通过嘴唇到气管导管插入)为 35 秒,四分位间距为 28-46 秒。在 29%的院前 RSIs 中,在插管前需要进行抽吸。在喉镜检查时,镜头起雾的发生率为 28%。逻辑回归显示,插管时间延长与气道污染、Cormack-Lehane 分级 2 或 3、多次探条通过或更换探条有关。
使用附加工具的平均 35 秒成功进行院前 RSI 首次尝试的视频记录,对于无声门视图、45 秒无探条放置和 60 秒无气管内导管放置的“困难定义”为 30 秒。了解呼吸暂停持续时间有助于指导氧合决策。所有紧急插管者都需要意识到抽吸的必要性。改善血液污染气道的管理和探条的使用可能会减少喉镜检查的时间,成为培训的重点。未来制造商可能会解决视频屏幕起雾和一些患者记录丢失的问题。