Title: Airway management in the prehospital setting
1Airway management in the prehospital setting
Dr X.Combes, SAMU du Val de Marne, Créteil, France
2Airway management in the prehospital setting
- Dr X.Combes, SAMU du Val de Marne, Créteil, France
3Why airway control is mandatory out of hospital?
- Airway protection
- Coma
- Sedation
- Respiratory assistance with positive pressure
ventilation - Respiratory distress
- Cardiopulmonary rescucitation
- Limitation or prevention of evolutive injury
- severe head traumatism
Winchell Rj et col Arch Surg 1997 Gentleman D et
col Lancet 1990
4How airway can be controlled?
5Indications for prehospital tracheal intubation
Jabre P, SFAR 2003 Adnet F,Ann Emerg
1998 Ricard-Hibon A, Eur J Anaesthesiology 2002
6Characteristics of extrahospital airway management
- Emergency context
- Hostile environnment
- Non cooperative patients
- Poor knowledge of medical patients history
- Not much time to upper airway evaluation
- Risk of pulmonary aspiration
- Interaction between patient and operator body
position
7Potential adverse physical interaction between
patient and operator
8Medical conditions and anatomical abnormalities
may induce difficult laryngeal visualization.....
9Incidence of failed prehospital intubation
100
80
60
Intubations ()
40
20
0
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
g Cantineau 1997 (224) h Adnet 1998 (n
691) i Orliaguet 1997 (n 157) j Adnet 1997
(n 394) k Ricard-Hibon 1997 (n 147) l
Adnet 1997 (n 311)
- a Stewart 1994 (n 779)
- b Pointer 1988 (n 383)
- c Krisanda 1992 (n 278)
- d Sayre 1998 (n 103)
- e Hedges 1988 (n 310)
- f Thompson 1994 (n 862)
10Influence of the sedation technique on intubation
difficulties
Adnet F Eur J Emerg Med 1998
11Effect of a RSI protocol introduction in a
medical prehospital unit
Ricard-Hibon A et col Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2002
12RSI helps Paramedics too
- Extrahospital paramedic heliported unit
- Introduction of a RSI protocol in daily practice
- Assessment of successful tracheal intubation
Rose WD Air Med J. 1994
13Orotracheal or Nasotracheal intubation?
Dronen SC et colAnn. Emerg Med 1987Â
14Influence of operator position when patient is
lying on the ground
Adnet F, Can J Anaesth 1998
15BURP backward, upward, rightward laryngeal
pressure
60 Cormack III gt II
BURP gt BACK
Knill R Can J Anaesth 1993
16Bougie and stylet
- First use in 1943 by Macintosh
- Successful blind tracheal intubation confirmed by
tactile sensation - Helpful for patient with cervical immobilisation
- Standard of practice in US emergency dpt
- Rigid with little flexibility
- Potentially traumatic for larynx and trachea
17Success rates of GEB and Stylet assisted
intubation in Cormack grade 3 patients
Gataure PS Anaesthesia 1996
18Use of Gum Elastic Bougie for Prehospital
Difficult Intubation
- Observationnal study during 30 months
- 1442 intubations
- 42 uses of GEB
- Success rate 80
- 60 of patients had associated factors for DI
- ENT neoplasy
- Morbid obesity
- Cervical reduced mobility
- Facial trauma
Jabre et al Am J Emerg med (in press)
19Pharyngeal artificial airways in extrahospital
setting
- Pharyngeal / oesopharyngeal
- Single / double cuff
- Single/double lumen
- Allowing or not blind intubation
20Combitube
- Often used as first airway device during CPR in
paramedic system - Several extrahospital cases of difficult airway
in trauma patients resolved with Combitube - Successful insertion by paramedics in 95 of
patients with extrahospital difficult airway
Davis DP and al Ann Emerg Med. 2003 Blostein PA
and al J Trauma. 1998
21LMA
- Proposed as initial method of airway control
during CPR - Particulary interesting in the difficult
intubation and difficult ventilation scenario - Several case reports of prehospital difficult
airway resolved with LMA have been reported
Greene MK and col, Anaesthesia 1992 Martin SE
and alThe journal of trauma 1999
22ILMA
- ILMA, first described in 1997 has become a
cornerstone of the in operating room difficut
airway - Some case reports in prehospital settings have
been reported - Its use with high success rate needs probably a
minimal initial training
Gibbs M and al Acad Emerg Med 2003 Combes and
al Ann Emerg Med 2004
23Training with ILMA on Manikin
24New airway devices
- CobraPLA
- (PerilaryngealAirway)
- PAxpress
- Laryngeal tube
25Cricothyroidotomy
- Ultimate Airway management strategy
- Frequently used in North American prehospital
paramedical system - Success rate 80-100
- Major complications 10
26What Is the Minimum Training Required for
Successful Cricothyroidotomy? A Study in
Mannequins
- 102 anesthesiologists
- Vidéo démonstration
- Performance of 10 cricothyroidotomies in manikins
Wong D et col Anesthesiology 2003
27Failure of intubation after 2 attempts under
direct laryngoscopy
New direct laryngoscopy with BURP
Success
Use of GEB ( 2 attempts)
Success
Use of the ILMA and call for help
Intubation through the ILMA
Success
Ventilation through the ILMA
Success
Failure
Transfer to the Hospital with ventilation through
the ILMA
Cricothyroidotomy
28Non invasive positive pressure ventilation
- CPAP or BiPAP
- Validated for COPD decompensation and severe
 cardiogenic pulmonary oedema - Majority of the studies are inhospital
- Potential large indications exist in the
prehospital setting
29In practice
30Conclusion
- In the prehospital setting the gold standard of
invasive airway management remains tracheal
intubation under direct laryngoscopy - Rapid sequence induction should be performed for
all patients with spontaneaous cardiac activity
in absence of contreindications - Predefined strategy including simple and
effective devices is the best mean to solve
difficult airway management situations - Non invasive airway control with face mask is
feasible in prehospital setting. Further large
studies are needed to precise the best
indications of prehospital NPPV