Title: Airway Management For Nurses
1Airway Management For Nurses
- Todd Lang, MD
- VVMC ED
- 8/31/2005
2Basic Airway ManagementBag-Mask Ventilation
- Slides adapted from Pat Melanson, MD
3Airway Assessment
- Assessment for airway compromise or threats and
need for interventions - Understand recent medical conditions, medicines
(blood thinners?), chest/neck problems - Examination for the potentially difficult airway
4Consider each patients airway in terms of
possible threats and difficulties in management.
5Indications for Active Airway Intervention
including intubation
- Failure to maintain patency
- Protection from aspiration
- Hypoxic/ hypercapnic respiratory failure
- Airway access for pulmonary toilet, drug
delivery,therapeutic hyperventilation - Intractable Shock
- Anticipated clinical deterioration
6Clinical Signs of Airway Compromise Threatened
Patency
- Inspiratory stridor
- Snoring ( pharyngeal obstruction )
- Gurgling ( blood/ secretions )
- Drooling ( epiglottitis )
- Hoarseness ( laryngeal edema/ vocal cord
paralysis) - Paradoxical chest wall movement
- Mass - abscess, hematoma, angioedema
7Clinical Signs of Airway Compromise Inadequate
Protection
- Blood in upper airway
- Pus in upper airway
- Persistent vomiting
- Loss of protective airway reflexes
- swallowing reflex is superior to gag reflex
8Clinical Signs of Airway CompromiseOxygenation
and Ventilation
- The assessment of oxygenation and ventilation is
a clinical one. - Arterial blood gases should not be relied upon to
assess whether intubation is necessary.
9Anticipated Course An elective airway is better
than an emergency or crash airway.
- Better training and more equipment in the ER
- In prep for transport (even to CT)
- Leaves time for failure and retry
10Techniques for the Compromised Airway
- Head Positioning
- Jaw Thrust, Chin lift
- Orophryngeal/ Nasopharyngeal airways
- Bag-Valve-Mask Ventilation
- Endotracheal Intubation
- Advanced techniques
- Cric, LMA, Combitube, Retrograde, Fibreoptic,
Light wand, Bouge
11BVM Ventilation
- The most important airway skill
- Always the first response to inadequate
oxygenation and ventilation - The first bail-out maneuver to a failed
intubation attempt - Attenuates the urgency to intubate
12Golden Rules of Bagging
- Anybody ( almost ) can be oxygenated and
ventilated with a bag and a mask - Manual ventilation skill with proper equipment is
a fundamental premise of advanced airway Rx
13BVM Ventilation
- Requires practice to master
- One hand to
- maintain face seal
- position head
- maintain patency
- Other hand ventilates
14Emergent Airway Management
15BVM Ventilation Technique
- insert oropharyngeal/nasopharyngeal
- Sniffingposition if C-spine OK
- Thumb index to maintain face seal
- Stem of mask in thenar webspace
- Middle finger under mandibular symphysis
- Ring/little finger under angle of mandible
- Maintain jaw thrust/mouth open
16BVM Ventilation Assessment of Efficacy
- Observe the chest rise and fall
- Good bilateral air entry
- Lack of air entering the stomach
- Feeling the bag
- Pulse oximetry
17BVM Ventilation Mask Seal Tips and Pearls
- Easier to get seals with masks too large than too
small - Inflate mask collar correctly
- Apply lubricant to beards to mat down hair
- It is easier to bag with dentures in place
- If edentulous insert gauze sponges into cheeks
18Predictors of a Difficult Airway Bag-Valve-Mask
Ventilation
- Upper airway obstruction
- Lack of dentures
- Beard
- Midfacial smash
- facial burns, dressings, scarring
- poor lung mechanics( resistance or compliance )
19Difficult Airway BVM
- degree of difficulty from zero to infinite
- zero no external effort or internal device
required - one person jaw thrust/ face seal
- oropharyngeal or nasopharyngeal AW
- two person jaw thrust / face seal
- both internal airway devices
- infinite no patency despite maximal external
effort and full use of OP/NP
20Algorithm for Difficulty Bagging
- Remove FB - Magill forceps
- Triple maneuver if c-spine clear
- Head tilt, jaw lift, mouth opening
- Nasal or oropharyngeal airways
- two-person, four-hand technique
- Do not abandon bagging unless it is impossible
with two people and both an OP and NP airway
21Difficult Ventilation Obese Patients
- excess soft tissue causes obstruction
- Use both OP and NP airways
- Two hands for mask seal and jaw thrust
- Avoid pushing in on soft tissue under jaw
- may force into airway, worsen obstruction
- Place patient in reverse Trendelenburg
- decreases abdo pressure on diaphragm
- lowers amount of pressure needed to bag
22Difficult Ventilation Edentulous Patients
- Cheeks fall inward difficult seal
- Inflate mask cuff to maximum
- Allow weight of bag to fall down over side of
leak - Place gauze at site of leak or inside mouth to
puff out cheek - Two-handed technique using 3rd and 4th fingers to
bunch up cheek
23Difficult Airway Maxims
- The first response to failure of bag-mask
ventilation is always better bag-mask ventilation - optimize airway position
- place OP and NP airways
- two-handed technique
- try lifting head off pillow to open airway
- Generate as much positive pressure as possible
without inflating the stomach
24Technique of Laryngoscopy
- Sniffing position to align oral-pharyngeal-laryn
geal axis - Flex neck by placing pillow beneath occiput (
raise 10 cm ) - Extend head maximally
- With laryngoscope
- open mouth fully
- push tongue to left out of view
- pull upward at 45 degrees
25Adducted vocal cords
26Open Cords
27Predictors of Difficult Laryngoscopy
- Short thick neck
- Receding mandible
- Buck teeth
- Poor mandibular mobility/ limited jaw opening
- Limited head and neck movement
- ( including trauma )
28Unsuccessful Intubation
- Bag the patient
- Maximize neck flex/ head ex
- Move tongue out of line of site
- Maximize mouth opening
- ID landmarks and adjust blade
- BURP maneuver (Backwards Upwards Rightwards
Pressure on Thyroid Cart.) - Increasing lifting force
- Consider Miller blade
- Bag the patient
29A Nurse Can
- BURP the patient
- Extend neck
- Bag Patient
- Watch the SaO2
- Suggest another devicetell doc to move on!!!
- Put towel under head
- Make sure the ETCO2 is measured
30Difficult Airway Ideas
- Awake looksedate dont paralyze--Etomidate
- ??Nasalnot much now
- LMA/Combitube
- Fiber optic intubation
31Blind Nasal Intubation
- success rates 65 - 80 in most series
- high complication rates
- epistaxis
- pharyngeal/ esophageal perforations
- increased incidence of O2 desaturation
- Considered second line approach only
- reserved for when RSI contraindicated
32Oral Intubation Without Drugs
- Reserved for the completely unconscious,
unresponsive, and apneic - Arrest situations only
33Oral Intubation with Sedation
- proponents argue use of BZ or opioids
- improves airway access
- decreases patient resistance
- avoids risks of neuromuscular blockade
- Generally obtunds patient to point of loss of
protective reflexes and respiratory drive - lower success rate, higher complications compared
with RSI
34Oral Intubation with SedationUse for the
Anticipated Difficult Airway
- if time permits
- topical anesthesia
- careful titrated sedation
- avoid obtundation
- Awake intubation technique
35Emergency Airway Concerns
- full stomach
- minimal respiratory reserve
- hemodynamic instability
- acute myocardial ischemia
- increased intracranial pressure
- The Difficult Airway
- Laryngoscopy
- bag-mask difficulty
36The Intubation Reflex
- Catecholamine release in response to laryngeal
manipulation - Tachycardia, hypertension, raised ICP
- Attenuated by beta-blockers, fentanyl
- ICP rise possibly attenuated by lidocaine
- Midazolam and thiopental have no effect
37Rapid Sequence Intubation Definition
- The near simultaneous administration of a
sedative-hypnotic agent and a neuromuscular
blocker in the presence of continuous cricoid
pressure to facilitate endotracheal intubation
and minimize risk of aspiration - modifications are made depending upon the
clinical scenario
38Rapid Sequence Intubation Advantages
- Optimizes intubating conditions/ facilitates
visualization - Increased rate of successful intubation
- Decreased time to intubation
- Decreased risk of aspiration
- Attenuation of hemodynamic and ICP changes
39Rapid Sequence Intubation Contraindications
- Anticipated difficulty with endotracheal
intubation - anatomic distortion
- Lack of operator skill or familiarity
- inability to preoxygenate
40Rapid Sequence Intubation Principles
- Emergency intubation is indicated
- The patient has a full stomach
- Intubation is predicted to be successful
- If intubation fails, ventilation is predicted to
be successful
41Rapid Sequence Intubation Procedure
- Pre-intubation assessment
- Pre-oxygenate
- Prepare ( for the worst )
- Premedicate
- Paralyze
- Pressure on cricoid
- Place the tube
- Post intubation assessment
42The 10 Ps of RSI
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45Pre-oxygenate ( Time
- 5 Minutes)
- 100 oxygen for 5 minutes
- 4 conscious deep breaths of 100 O2
- Fill FRC with reservoir of 100 O2
- Allows 3 to 5 minutes of apnea
- Essential to allow avoidance of bagging
- If necessary bag with cricoid pressure
46Preparation (
Time - 5 Minutes )
- ETT, stylet, blades, suction, BVM
- Cardiac monitor, pulse oximeter, ETCO2
- One ( preferably two ) iv lines
- Drugs
- Difficult airway kit including cric kit
- Patient positioning
47Equipment for Intubation
- Laryngoscope
- Handle
- contains the batteries for the light source
- Blades
- Straight blade Miller
- Curved MacIntosh
48Intubation Equipment
- Laryngoscope
- batteries
- light source
- Blades
- straight (used more for infants)
- Curved (some believe it reduces dental trauma)
- ET tube
- Adult female 7-8 mm
- Adult male 8-8.5 mm
- Stylet
- 10 cc Syringe
- Water soluble gel
49Oddly, the peds code cart blades that are
included in the Broslow packs do not fit our
laryngoscopes. You need to use the metal ones in
the top of the cart. The doctor will probably
not know this at VVMC.
50Intubation Equipment
- Stylet
- Helps conform the endotracheal tube to any
desired configuration, facilitating insertion of
the tube into the larynx and trachea. - The end of the stylet must always be recessed at
least ½ inch from the distal end of the tube.
51Additional Intubation Equipment
- Magill Forceps
- Helps direct the tip of the ET tube into the
larynx during intubation and to remove some
foreign bodies
52Prepare 8.0 tube for men, and 7.5 for women WITH
A STYLET.
53Pre-treatment/ Prime ( Time
- 2 Minutes )
- Lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg iv
- Defasciculating dose of non-depolarizing NMB
- Beta-blocker or fentanyl
- Induction agent
- Etomidate 0.3 mg/kg
- Midazolam 0.1 - 0.4mg/kg
- Ketamine 1.5 - 2.0 mg/kg
54Paralyze ( Time Zero )
- Succinylcholine 1.5 mg/kg iv
- Allow 45 - 60 seconds for complete muscle
relaxation - Alternatives
- Vecuromium 0.1 - 0.2 mg/kg
- Rocuronium 0.6 - 1.2 mg/kg
55Pressure
- Sellick maneuver
- initiate upon loss of consciousness
- continue until ETT balloon inflation
- release if active vomiting
56Intubation Procedure
- Cricoid pressure should be applied by a second
rescuer during endotracheal intubation in adults
to protect against regurgitation of gastric
contents and to ensure placement in the tracheal
orifice - Cricoid pressure should be maintained until until
the cuff of the endotracheal tube is inflated - Dont bag patient after paralyzed
57Place the Tube (
Time Zero 45 Secs )
- Wait for optimal paralysis
- Continue cricoid pressure
- Confirm tube placement with ETCO2
- Dont bag the patient unless first try fails
58Confirmation of ETT PlacementClinical Evaluation
- Observation of ETT pacing through cords
- Clear, equal breath sounds bilaterally
- Absence of breath sounds over epigastrium
- Symmetrical rising of chest
- Condensation or fogging of ETT
- Chest X-ray
- ALL SUBJECT TO FAILURE
- Pulse oximetry is LATE indicator
59Confirmation of ETT Placement
- Placement of ETT in the esophagus is an accepted
complication of intubation - However, failure to recognize and correct
esophageal intubation immediately IS NOT
ACCEPTABLE - Either ETCO2 detection or an aspiration technique
should be used on every emergency intubation
60The nurse should verify that the tube position is
confirmed multiply.
61Confirmation of ETT PlacementEnd-tidal CO2
Detection
- Colorimetric
- Small, disposable
- Useful in pre-hospital care
- Changes from purple to yellow if CO2
- 100 specific if bright yellow
- Indeterminate ( brown ) can indicate esophagus
with carbonated beverage, or low output state
62Postintubation care
- Secure and verify tube placement
- Sedate and paralyze before drugs wear off
- Be vigilant for misplaced tube
- Chest film and adjust tube depth
63Intubation Procedure
- Inflate the the cuff with 10-20 ml of air and
ventilate the patients lungs with a BVM The tube
is properly positioned when the patients teeth
are between the 19 and 23 cm marks on the tube,
placing the tip of the tube 2-3 cm above the
carina
64Lower Airway
- The average tube depth in men is 22 cm
- The average tube depth in women is 21 cm
65Intubation Procedure
- Secure ET tube to non-moving maxillary area of
face - During a coding situation ventilation need not be
synchronized with chest compressions - It should be performed asynchronously at 12-15
ventilations per minute with 100 FIO2
66DRUGS
67Etomidate and Sux is the most common RSI combo
used at VVMC. You should know the dosing for
both chemicals.
68Paralyzing Agents
- NMBAs cause skeletal muscle relaxation by
blocking acetylcholine transmission - Usually succinylcholine (1.5 to 2mg/kg)
- Can cause transient fasiculations
- onset in about 40 seconds lasting up to 10
minutes - Dose generously, you want them paralyzed
69Succinylcholine Complications
- Inability to secure airway
- Increased vagal tone ( second dose )
- Histamine release ( rare )
- Increased ICP/ IOP/ intragastric pressure
- Hyperkalemia with burns, NM disease
- malignant hyperthermia
70Succinylcholine Contraindications
- Hyperkalemia - renal failure
- Active neuromuscular disease with functional
denervation ( 6 days to 6 months) - Extensive burns or crush injuries
- Malignant hyperthermia
- Pseudocholinesterase deficiency
- Organophosphate poisoning
71An ICU or ER nurse should know the
contraindications to sux and etomidate and be
able alert the arriving team.
72Rocuronium
- Also known as Zemuron with dosing of 1mg/kg
- Rapid onset in 2-3 minutes
- Lasts a little longer than SUX
- NOT IN RSI BOX at VVMC
73Vecuronium
- Also known as Norcuron with dosing of .15 mg/kg
IV - Duration of about 30 minutes
- Use this after intubation till patient is settled
and well sedated to prevent vomiting
74Etomidate
- Etomidate (.2-.6 mg/kg IV) is rapidly becoming
the most commonly used induction med. - It takes effect in about 1 minute, lasting up to
5 minutes - Preferred in trauma patients, because it doesnt
cause an increase in ICP nor has it been shown to
exacerbate hypotension. - May produce myoclonus (resembling small seizures)
but requires no treatment. - Contraindicated in pregnant patients
75Depolarizing dose
- Some people believe that it is useful to give a
tenth of the dose of vecuronium before giving
sux, to blunt the depolarizing fasciculations
that it causes and their possible effects on ICP
or C-spine. - Not universally done
76Fentanyl
- 3-5 mcg/kg IV
- Onset is immediate and protects against increased
ICP and cardiac stress (MI patient) - May lower blood pressure
- Give as premedication or as induction agent
rarely.
77Midazolam (Versed)
- Short acting benzodiazepine
- IV dose .07-.3 mg/kg IV
- Time of onset 1 - 5 minutes
- Duration of action ½-2 hours
- Preferred agent for sedation of less than 24
hours - Good amnesia
- High doses for intubation (5-20mg)
78Ketamine
- dosing of 1-2 mg/kg IV
- Has a bronchodilating effect and should be
administered with atropine (.02mg/kg) and versed - Rarely used, but perhaps in COPD/Asthma
- Does not stop breathing
79Propofol (Diprivan)
- Fast acting highly lipid-soluble
sedative-hypnotic - A reasonable choice for intubation, but not
nearly as common as etomidate - Often lowers BP, creates coma and may stop
breathing - Generally started as the sedation drip after
intubation
80Lidocaine
- 1.5 mg/kg
- May be used to decrease ICP response
- May decrease bronchospastic response
81The Difficult or Failed Airway
82Difficult Airway Maxims
- It is preferable to use superior judgement -- to
avoid having to use superior skill.
83The Difficult Airway
- Must be able to assess or anticipate the degree
of difficulty - Then select method most likely to succeed
- If properly assessed and felt to be intubatable
without significant difficulty - 1-4 /1000 will be impossible intubations (O.R.)
- 1 / 280 obstetrical patients
- 1 /10,000 impossible to intubate or
ventilate(O.R.) - 1-2 cricothyroidotomy rate in ED
84Difficult Airway Maxims
- Use judicious sedation and topical airway
anesthesia to have a quick look in doubtful cases - In certain situations a paralytic agent and RSI
may still be the best choice
85The Difficult Airway
- Not all airway management failures are avoidable
or predictable - Attempt to minimize failures
- Have several definite back-up plans ready for the
Failed Airway
86You and your team must have a plan B and know how
and when to execute it. Period.
87Difficult Airway Maxims
- The first response to failure of Bag-Mask
Ventilation is always better BVM - optimize airway position
- place both OP and NP airways
- two-handed, two-person technique
- try lifting head off pillow to open airway
- Generate as much positive pressure as possible
without inflating the stomach
88Plan B Response to Unanticipated Difficulty
- Difficult laryngoscopy and intubation
- Cant intubate but Can ventilate
- Cant intubate and Cant ventilate
- Difficult Mask Ventilation
89Unsuccessful Intubation Plan B
- Bag the patient
- Maximize neck flex/ head ex
- Move tongue out of line of site
- Maximize mouth opening
- ID landmarks and adjust blade
- BURP maneuver
- (Backwards Upwards Rightwards Pressure on Thyroid
Cartilage) - Increasing lifting force
- Consider Miller blade
- Bag the patient
90Unsuccessful Intubation Plan B
- An optimal or best attempt at difficult
laryngoscopy should consist of - use of optimal sniffing position
- no significant muscle tone
- use of optimum external laryngeal manipulation
(BURP) - one change in length of blade
- one change in type of blade
- a reasonably experienced laryngoscopist
91Unsuccessful Intubation Plan B
- Remember, the first response to failure to
intubate should always be to Bag-Mask-Ventilate
the patient - The first response to failure of
bag-mask-ventilation is always better
bag-mask-ventilation
92The Failed Intubation Definition
- Three failed attempts to intubate
- by an experienced intubator
- Inability to ventilate with BVM
- Inability to oxygenate
93The Failed Intubation
- If cant intubate but can ventilate with BVM have
time to consider options - Light guided technique (Lighted stylet)
- Combitube
- LMA
- Fiberoptic techniques
- Retrograde intubation
- Cricothyrotomy
94The Failed Intubation
- If cant intubate, cant ventilate , must act
immediately - Cricothyrotomy
- Percutaneous Transtracheal Jet Ventilation
- Combitube
- LMA
- The last three are temporizing measures and not
definitive airway management
95It is part of your job as a nurse to move the
team to Plan B when needed Especially after
three failed laryngoscopy attempts.
96Difficult Airway Kit
- Is being made now and will be brought to
intubations in the future.
97VVMC Difficult Airway Options
- Combitube
- Cricothyrotomy
- Fiber Optic
- LMA
- Maybe getting gum elastic bougie
98Laryngeal Mask Airway Technique
- Lubricate both sides
- Open airway with head tilt, sniffing position
- Insert LMA with laryngeal surface down
- Press device onto hard palate
- Advance using index finger
- Use curve to advance over base of tongue
- pushed as far as possible into hypopharynx
- Stop when resistance felt(upper esophag.
sphincter) - Inflate collar and start bag ventilation
99LMA and the Difficult Airway
- Consider use early in a cant intubate, cant
ventilate situation while also getting prepared
for a surgical airway or TTJV - A temporizing measure but can be used as a
conduit for endotracheal intubation - the Intubating Laryngeal Mask
- The LMA is a supraglottic device
- Not suitable if the airway difficulty is due to
laryngeal problems i.e., (laryngospasm) or local
pharyngeal abnormalities ( abscess, hematoma,
edema)
100Emergency Non-surgical Ventilation Combitube
- Dual-lumen, dual-cuffed rescue airway device
- The two lumens allow ventilation whether placed
in trachea or esophagus - If in trachea position, functions like an ETT
- If in esophageal position, the two balloons seal
hypopharynx proximally and esophagus distally and
perforations in esophageal lumen between the
cuffs allow for ventilation - Placed blindly
101Multi-lumen airways
Multilumen airways should be considered when
conventional tracheal intubation measures are
unsuccessful or unavailable
- Esophageal and tracheal placement of a pharyngeal
tracheal lumen (PTL) airway
102Digital Intubation
- Laryngeal mask airway (LMA)
103Emergency Non-surgical Ventilation Transtracheal
Jet Ventilation
- Puncture cricothyroid membrane with large-bore
(12 or 14 Gauge) kink-resistant catheter
connected to 3-way stopcock or to a suction
catheter with control vent - 50 psi wall oxygen source
- High pressure tubing
- Ventilate for 2 seconds (or until chest rise)
- Release valve for 4 to 5 seconds (exhalation)
104Emergency Surgical Airway Maxims
- they are usually a bloody mess, but ...
- a bloody surgical airway is better than an
arrested patient with a nice looking neck
105Emergency Surgical Access Cricothyrotomy
- We are buying these kits. I have never seen one
outside the ER.
106You must know where the Cric kit is.
107Thanks for listening!Any questions?