Title: PROVISION OF DIFFICULT AIRWAY EQUIPMENT AND TRAINEES
1PROVISION OF DIFFICULT AIRWAY EQUIPMENT AND
TRAINEES EXPERIENCE IN ITS USE in the theatre
suites and ITUsof the Northwest rotation
- Brendan McGrath
- Bhaskar Saha, Ken Peckett, Sophie Bishop
2Background
- Trainees rotate are exposed to a variety of
difficult airway equipment. - Familiarity in an emergency is an essential part
of ITU anaesthetic training. - The Difficult Airway Society guidelines.
- Techniques
- Equipment
- Various difficult airway situations
3DAS Guidelines 2004
- Recommended equipment for management of
unanticipated difficult intubation. - Adult, non obstetric.
- Equipment list compiled to facilitate techniques
recommended. - Includes equipment that should be available for
routine airway management.
4DAS Recommendations
- The equipment immediately available in all
areas where anaesthesia is administered. - stocked in dedicated trolleys.
- All anaesthetists should be familiar with the
contents and location of the trolley. - Training should be provided in the use of
equipment selected by each department.
5The list - essentials
- At least one alternative blade (e.g. straight,
McCoy) - Intubating Laryngeal Mask Airway
- ETT reinforced and microlaryngeal size 5 6mm
- Flexible fibreoptic laryngoscope
- Proseal LMA
- Cricothyroid cannula
- Surgical cricothyroidotomy kit
6The list alternative techniques of proven value
- Bullard type laryngoscope
- Trachlight
- Aintree Intubation Catheter
- Combitube
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8DAS Guidelines for unanticipated difficult
intubation
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10Cant intubate, Cant ventilate.
11The survey
12Methods
- We contacted the 18 hospitals throughout the
Northwest rotation which trainees attend. - Ascertained what difficult airway equipment was
immediately available. - Main theatre suite.
- ITU.
- Visited or telephoned clinical areas directly.
13What about the people using the kit?
- We also surveyed 60 of the regions trainees
- SHO year 2 and above
- Training received
- Experience acquired
14Results of equipment survey
15Theatre
16ITU
17Results of equipment survey
- Not all hospitals had a full compliment of
difficult airway equipment. - No trolleys, cricothyroidotomy kits, capnography
- Wide variety of equipment was available
throughout the region. - The provision of equipment was generally even
sparser in the ITUs.
18Equipment feedback
- Often different theatre suites in same hospitals
have different kit - Usually sterile packaged single use
19Results of surveys of trainees experience
20Who we asked
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22How many times had you ever used these various
laryngoscope blades?
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24How many times have you ever used specialist
LMAs?
25Are you confident to use these LMAs
unsupervised?
Yes
Yes
No
No
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27How many times have you been involved in
cricothyroidotomy?
28Are you confident to perform a cricothyroidotomy
unsupervised?
Yes
No
No
Yes
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30What is your experience in performing an ITU
bronchoscopy?Have you ever been to a bronch list?
31Are you confident to perform an unsupervised ITU
bronchoscopy?
Yes
No
32How many times have you been involved in a
fibre-optic intubation?
33Are you confident to fibre-optically intubate?
No
Yes
No
Yes
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35Summary of findings
- Most SpRs surveyed were experienced in core
techniques - Exposure to fibre-optic intubation and
cricothyroidotomy training was very limited. - Exposure to bronchoscopy and fibre-optic skills
were limited.
36Conclusions - equipment
- Provision of difficult airway equipment in the
hospitals of this region is not standardised. - Some theatre suites and especially ITUs lack
basic equipment altogether. - This makes training difficult.
37Conclusions - equipment
- Rotating trainees can be left exposed in
emergency situations. - Lack of equipment
- Lack of familiarity
- Lack of training opportunities
- Lack of experience
38Conclusions - training
- Equipment issues need addressing to allow
training. - ILMA experience and confidence poor.
- Not all clinical areas have them
- Cricothyroidotomy training, experience and
confidence was poor. - Perc trachy experience good grounding
- Formal training?
- Make most of opportunities to practice
39Conclusions - training
- Bronchoscopy experience poor
- F.O experience also poor (anaesthetic skill?)
- Maximise use of Medical bronchoscopy lists
- Maximise ITU bronchoscopy exposure
- Practical courses (esp. non anaes trainees)
40In an ideal world
- All hospitals on rotation would have standardised
kit - All trainees familiar with its use
- Each department would have demonstration models
- Photographic instructions for use of that
specific equipment in clinical area?