Fosse Kjetil, Salomonsen Magnus, Gisvold Sven Erik, Gundersen Bjørnar, Nordseth Trond
Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, St. Olav Hospital, Trondheim, Norway.
Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway.
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2025 Mar;69(3):e70007. doi: 10.1111/aas.70007.
Few guidelines address how to handle unanticipated ventilatory problems and hypoxemia in a successfully intubated patient. We will refer to this situation as "can intubate-cannot ventilate." The situation may occur immediately after intubation or later during general anaesthesia. The aim of this paper is to describe an algorithm for handling this situation. In an intubated patient, the airway can be considered a continuum from the ventilator to the alveoli, and the problem is somewhere along this route: Ventilator → Hoses → Filter → Tracheal tube (TT) → Tracheae → Bronchi → Bronchioles → Alveoli. The proposed algorithm is based on clinical experience and has not been externally validated.
The first critical decision to be made is whether the TT has been placed correctly in the trachea or not. Positive wave-formed capnography is the primary marker for correct intubation. Video and/or direct laryngoscopy can be used for further verification. The patient should be disconnected from the ventilator and manually ventilated with bag-valve and 100% oxygen. An open tube should then be verified by applying a suction catheter through the tube. If these measures do not improve the situation, a fibreoptic scope should be inserted to further assess possible causes of difficult ventilation. If no obvious treatable cause is detected at this point, bronchospasm, anaphylaxis, or pneumothorax should be ruled out or treated. Further handling should focus on optimizing gas exchange in the lungs and considering more advanced treatment options to improve oxygenation and circulation.
We have proposed an algorithm to handle unanticipated problems with ventilation and oxygenation in a patient who has been successfully intubated. Equipment failure and a blocked TT should be ruled out before diagnosing and treating medical or surgical causes of ventilatory problems.
This article presents a logical approach to the time-sensitive and critical situation where, for some reason, after intubation, ventilation of the lungs is not succeeding. The authors propose steps for a systematic approach, and recognition of different possible explanations for ventilation not working is informative.
很少有指南涉及如何处理已成功插管患者中出现的意外通气问题和低氧血症。我们将这种情况称为“能插管 - 不能通气”。这种情况可能在插管后立即出现,也可能在全身麻醉后期出现。本文的目的是描述一种处理这种情况的算法。在插管患者中,气道可被视为从呼吸机到肺泡的一个连续体,问题就出在这条路径的某个地方:呼吸机→软管→过滤器→气管导管(TT)→气管→支气管→细支气管→肺泡。所提出的算法基于临床经验,尚未经过外部验证。
首先要做出的关键决定是TT是否已正确置入气管。正向波形二氧化碳描记图是插管正确的主要标志。可使用视频喉镜和/或直接喉镜进行进一步验证。应将患者与呼吸机断开连接,并用球囊面罩和100%氧气进行手动通气。然后应通过将吸引导管插入管中来确认管是否通畅。如果这些措施不能改善情况,应插入纤维支气管镜以进一步评估通气困难的可能原因。如果此时未检测到明显的可治疗原因,则应排除或治疗支气管痉挛、过敏反应或气胸。进一步的处理应侧重于优化肺内气体交换,并考虑更高级的治疗方案以改善氧合和循环。
我们提出了一种算法,用于处理已成功插管患者中出现的意外通气和氧合问题。在诊断和治疗通气问题的医学或外科原因之前,应排除设备故障和TT堵塞的情况。
本文针对因某种原因插管后肺部通气未成功这一具有时间敏感性和关键性的情况,提出了一种合乎逻辑的处理方法。作者提出了一种系统方法的步骤,认识到通气不畅的不同可能原因很有参考价值。