Title: Advanced Life Support
1Advanced Life Support
2Disclaimer!!!
- I am not an expert
- This information is to orient only this is not
a course - Medicine is a rapidly changing practice, so stay
current - Listen to your attendings and current literature,
they are definitive sources
3Case scenario
- A 60 year old man collapses at the Timber Wolf
while playing pool with his friends. Upon
arrival they tell you that he was complaining of
chest pain and they think he has heart problems.
You had just received a DOT report that I90 will
be closed for at least 30 minutes for avalanche
control and snow removal. It is snowing heavily
and you know from experience that Airlift
Northwest cannot fly in this weather. A
volunteer ski patrol physician is on the hill
today and also responds to the call. What do you
do?
4Objectives
At the end of this course, you should be able
to...
- Understand the chain of survival
- Understand the ABCDs of ALS
- Assist in ALS specific procedures, including
intubation and IV therapy - Recognize and prepare ALS specific equipment
- Document using a SOAP note and ALS flow chart
5The Chain of Survival (ALS)
Report of Incident
Ski Patrol Response
Snoq. Fire Dept./AMR
Patrol MD
OR
ALS transportation
Emergency Department
Definitive ALS care
6Primary ABCD Survey
Think Assess and Manage...
- Airway open the airway
- Breathing provide positive-pressure ventilation
if needed - Circulation give chest compressions if no pulse
- Defibrillate shock VF/pulseless VT
Source AHA ACLS Provider Manual
7Secondary ABCD Survey
Think Assess and Manage...
- Airway provide advanced airway (ET tube)
- Breathing check for adequate oxygenation and
ventilation - including physical exam,
oxygenation monitoring, securing of adjunct - Circulation obtain IV access, determine rhythm,
give appropriate agents - Differential Diagnosis search for, find, and
treat reversible causes.
Source AHA ACLS Provider Manual
8Patient Monitoring
- Heart rate and quality
- Respiratory rate and quality
- Blood pressure
- Oxygen saturation
- Cardiac rhythms using AED
- Skin color/temperature/texture
- Core body temperature
9Advanced Airways
- Gold standard for secure airway is endotracheal
intubation (ET tube) - Indications for ET tube
- Pulmonary or cardiac arrest
- Trauma patients in need of airway control or sup.
Oxygen - Respiratory distress
- Respiratory failure due to overdose
- Pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs)
- Severe asthma
- Asphyxia
- Severe allergic reaction
Source Emergency Care 9th Ed.
10Endotracheal Intubation
- Steps in endotracheal intubation
- Hyperventilate patient prior to intubation
- Prepare and test all equipment
- Laryngoscope assembly
- Endotracheal tube with stylet and 10cc inflation
syringe - Position the patients head
- Make sure airway is aligned
- Prepare to insert laryngoscope blade
- Lift the tongue out of the way with the
laryngoscope - Bring the glottic opening into view
- Second rescuer perform Sellicks maneuver
(cricoid pressure) during intubation to suppress
vomiting and aid in visualization
Source Emergency Care 9th Ed.
11Endotracheal Intubation cont.
- Visualize the glottic opening
- Insert the endotracheal tube with a stylet
- Remove the laryngoscope and stylet. Inflate the
cuff with 5-10cc air - Attach a bag/valve unit to the the ET tube
universal adapter - Auscultate the lungs and epigastrium areas to
confirm placement - If placement confirmed, secure the tube in place
Source Emergency Care 9th Ed.
12Endotracheal tubes
Inflation catheter
Murphy Eye
Tracheal cuff inflation valve
Pilot Balloon
Tracheal cuff
Universal 15mm adapter
13Endotracheal tubes
ET tube size
14Laryngoscope
Handle
Light
Blade
15Laryngoscope Blades
1 Infant 2 Child 3 Adult 4 Large Adult
Miller
Macintosh
16Difficult Airways
- Anatomical variations
- Airway obstructions
- Anaphylaxis and airway swelling
- Penetrating injuries to head/neck
- Blunt trauma
- Excessive pharyngeal bleeding
- Cervical spine immobilization
17Alternatives!
- Oropharyngeal airways
- Nasopharyngeal airways
- Laryngeal mask airways (LMA)
- Combi-tubes
- ET tube introducers (Bougie)
- Surgical airways
18Oropharyngeal Airways
19Nasopharyngeal Airways
20Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA)
21LMA cont.
22Combitubes
23Combitube cont.
24Introducer / Bougie
- Used to find trachea by feeling ridges of
cartilage rings - ET tube placed over the top of introducer
- ET tube secured in trachea
25Surgical Airway
26What to use?
27Confirming airway
- Confirm tube placement by
- End tidal CO2 detector (right)
- Auscultation
- Capnography
- Pulse-OX
- Chest XR
28Intravenous Therapy (IV)
- An intravenous line is inserted into a vein in
order to - Administer fluid volume
- Administer medications
- Administer blood (done in hospital)
- Indications (not all inclusive)
- Cardiac event
- Loss of consciousness
- Hypovolemia
- Severe hypothermia
- Shock
- Diabetic emergency
- Trauma
29IV Setup
IV solution
IV solution Drip Set
30IV Step by Step Setup
- Take out and inspect all equipment
- Select proper administration set
- Make sure the flow regulator is closed
- Remove all protective coverings, keeping
everything sterile, and insert the spiked tip of
the tubing into the fluid bag entirely with a
quick twist - Hold the fluid bag higher than the drip chamber,
fill the chamber to the line by squeezing it - Open the flow regulator and allow the fluid to
flush the tubing - Turn off the flow
Source Emergency Care 9th Ed.
31Maintaining an IV
- An IV must flow continually to stay open (TKO)
- Things that can interrupt flow
- Closed flow regulator
- Closed clamp
- Tubing kink
- Tubing caught under patient or backboard
- Tourniquet left in place
- Tubing pulled out of catheter
- Look out for
- Infiltrations
- Runaway flow rate (too fast may overload patient)
- Low level in fluid bag
Source Emergency Care 9th Ed.
32Angiocaths (IV needles)
Angiocath Size (gage / length)
33Electrocardiograms
- Graph of heart voltage vs. time
- 6 precordial leads leads
- 4 limb leads
34(No Transcript)
35Evaluation of EKGs
- First, determine rate
- Each small box is 40 msec
- Each larger box is 200 msec
- To estimate can use pneumonic
- "300-150-100-75-60-50"
- Count lines back from any QRS complex!
students.med.nyu.edu/erclub/ekgs
36Evaluation of EKGs
- Second, determine rhythm source and regularity
- Third, determine the axis
students.med.nyu.edu/erclub/ekgs
37EKGs
- Read Rapid Interpretation of EKGs
- Read the ACLS Provider Manual
- Search for online practice simulators
- Pursue EKG interpretation on clinical rotations
38Medication Kit
Needles
Large Vials
Small Vials
39Medications
- Name
- brand and chemical
- Concentration
- amount drug/volume
- Route
- where it goes
40Back to the Case Scenario
A 60 year old man collapses at the Timber Wolf
while playing pool with his friends. Upon
arrival they tell you that he was complaining of
chest pain and they think he has heart problems.
You had just received a DOT report that I90 will
be closed for at least 30 minutes for avalanche
control and snow removal. It is snowing heavily
and you know from experience that Airlift
Northwest cannot fly in this weather. A
volunteer ski patrol physician is on the hill
today and also responds to the call. What do you
do?
41Primary ABCDs
- Check for responsiveness
- Call aid room
- Establish code 99
- Ask for ALS response and ALS equipment
- Airway
- Open the airway patient not breathing
- Breathing
- Provide positive pressure ventilations still no
breathing - Circulation
- Check for pulse there is none
- Give chest compressions
- Defibrillate
- Assess for and shock VF/pulseless VT, up to 3
times - (200J, 300J, 360J) still no spontaneous
circulation
Source AHA ACLS Provider Manual
42Secondary ABCDs
- Airway
- Place airway device as soon as possible (ET tube)
- Breathing
- Confirm airway device placement and secure
- Confirm oxygenation and ventilation
- Circulation
- Establish IV access
- Identify rhythm monitor
- Administer drugs appropriate for rhythm and
condition - Differential Diagnosis
- Search for and treat identified reversible causes
Source AHA ACLS Provider Manual
43Continued Management
- After the initial 3 shocks, the patient was
intubated, an IV established with lactated
ringers (LR), and an AED was attached showing the
rhythm below. What do you want to do now? - Epinephrine 1mg IV push, repeat every 3-5 minutes
- Resume attempts to defibrillate
- 1 X 360J still no spontaneous sinus rhythm
Source AHA ACLS Provider Manual
44Continued Management
- Consider antiarrhythmics, (one of the following
examples) - Amiodarone
- Lidocaine
- Magnesium
- Procainamide
- Resume attempts to defibrillate
- 1 X 360J Congratulations! the rhythm is shown
below.
45Special Considerations
- Transportation should never be delayed to
initiate ALS care on behalf of Ski Patrol - Patrol ALS providers may travel with BLS
transportation until the patient is transferred
to Medics / Airlift - ALS care should be coordinated with online
medical control or responding medics / flight
nurses - Once ALS care is initiated, the provider must
stay with the patient until transferred to
equivalent care - Special documentation must occur to provide
quality continuation of care - Ski Patrol does not! have a duty to provide ALS
46Documentation
- Full time job assign it early!
- If you are not qualified to assist in ALS this
may be you! - Incident form
- As usual
- SOAP form
- Subjective what the patient tells you
- Objective what you observe
- Assessment what you think is going on
- Plan what you plan to do about it
- Flow chart
- Time
- All vital signs
- Medications, how much, and when
47What you need to remember
- Stay calm
- Get the ball rolling early
- Follow the direction of the provider in charge
- Try to stay one step ahead of the game
- Stick to the basics most of this stuff makes
sense - Help with what you can
- Stay familiar with the equipment and procedures
in your area - Tail light of an ambulance are a good thing!
48Question?