Ease and difficulty of pre-hospital airway management in 425 paediatric patients treated by a helicopter emergency medical service: a retrospective analysis

被引:16
作者
Schmidt, Alexander R. [1 ]
Ulrich, Lea [2 ,3 ]
Seifert, Burkhardt [4 ]
Albrecht, Roland [5 ]
Spahn, Donat R. [2 ,3 ]
Stein, Philipp [2 ,3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Childrens Hosp, Dept Anaesthesiol, Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Univ Zurich, Inst Anaesthesiol, Zurich, Switzerland
[3] Univ Zurich Hosp, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland
[4] Univ Zurich, Dept Biostat, Epidemiol Biostat & Prevent Inst, Zurich, Switzerland
[5] Swiss Air Ambulance, Rega Rettungsflugwacht Guarde Aerienne, Zurich, Switzerland
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
Paediatric airway; Pre-hospital airway; Emergency airway; Endotracheal tube size and depth; HEMS; ENDOTRACHEAL INTUBATION; TRACHEAL TUBE; TIP POSITION; CHILDREN; DEPTH; SIZE; PARAMEDICS; CUFF;
D O I
10.1186/s13049-016-0212-9
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background: Pre-hospital paediatric airway management is complex. A variety of pitfalls need prompt response to establish and maintain adequate ventilation and oxygenation. Anatomical disparity render laryngoscopy different compared to the adult. The correct choice of endotracheal tube size and depth of insertion is not trivial and often challenged due to the initially unknown age of child. Methods: Data from 425 paediatric patients (<17 years of age) with any airway manipulation treated by a Swiss Air-Ambulance crew between June 2010 and December 2013 were retrospectively analysed. Endpoints were: 1) Endotracheal intubation success rate and incidence of difficult airway management in primary missions. 2) Correlation of endotracheal tube size and depth of insertion with patient's age in all (primary and secondary) missions. Results: In primary missions, the first laryngoscopy-guided endotracheal intubation attempt was successful in 95.3% of cases, with an overall success rate of 98.6%. Difficult airway management was reported in 10 (4.7%) patients. Endotracheal tube size was frequently chosen inadequately large (overall 50 of 343 patients: 14.6%), especially and statistically significant in the age group below 1 year (19 of 33 patients; p < 0.001). Tubes were frequently and distinctively more deeply inserted (38.9%) than recommended by current formulae. Conclusion: Difficult airway management, including cannot intubate and cannot ventilate situations during pre-hospital paediatric emergency treatment was rare. In contrast, the success rate of endotracheal intubation at the first attempt was very high. High numbers of inadequate endotracheal tube size and deep placement according to patient age require further analysis. Practical algorithms need to be found to prevent potentially harmful treatment.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 41 条
[31]   Assessing the impact of pre-hospital airway management on severe traumatic Brain injury: A systematic review and Meta-analysis [J].
Shafique, Muhammad Ashir ;
Haseeb, Abdul ;
Asghar, Bushra ;
Kumar, Aashish ;
Chaudhry, Eymaan Riaz ;
Mustafa, Muhammad Saqlain .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2024, 78 :188-195
[32]   Pre-hospital endotracheal intubation in severe traumatic brain injury: ventilation targets and mortality—a retrospective analysis of 308 patients [J].
Jürgen Knapp ;
Pascal Doppmann ;
Markus Huber ;
Lorenz Meuli ;
Roland Albrecht ;
Stephen Sollid ;
Urs Pietsch .
Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, 31
[33]   Multifaceted implementation and sustainability of a protocol for prehospital anaesthesia: a retrospective analysis of 2115 patients from helicopter emergency medical services [J].
Angerman, Susanne ;
Kirves, Hetti ;
Nurmi, Jouni .
SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA RESUSCITATION & EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2023, 31 (01)
[34]   Multifaceted implementation and sustainability of a protocol for prehospital anaesthesia: a retrospective analysis of 2115 patients from helicopter emergency medical services [J].
Susanne Ångerman ;
Hetti Kirves ;
Jouni Nurmi .
Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, 31
[35]   Incidence of difficult airway situations during prehospital airway management by emergency physicians-A retrospective analysis of 692 consecutive patients [J].
Thoeni, Nils ;
Piegeler, Tobias ;
Brueesch, Martin ;
Sulser, Simon ;
Haas, Thorsten ;
Mueller, Stefan M. ;
Seifert, Burkhardt ;
Spahn, Donat R. ;
Ruetzler, Kurt .
RESUSCITATION, 2015, 90 :42-45
[36]   Pre-hospital endotracheal intubation in severe traumatic brain injury: ventilation targets and mortality-a retrospective analysis of 308 patients [J].
Knapp, Juergen ;
Doppmann, Pascal ;
Huber, Markus ;
Meuli, Lorenz ;
Albrecht, Roland ;
Sollid, Stephen ;
Pietsch, Urs .
SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA RESUSCITATION & EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2023, 31 (01)
[37]   Does the presence of an emergency physician influence pre-hospital time, pre-hospital interventions and the mortality of severely injured patients? A matched-pair analysis based on the trauma registry of the German Trauma Society (TraumaRegister DGU®) [J].
Bieler, Dan ;
Franke, Axel ;
Lefering, Rolf ;
Hentsch, Sebastian ;
Willms, Arnulf ;
Kulla, Martin ;
Kollig, Erwin .
INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED, 2017, 48 (01) :32-40
[38]   Location of arrest and effect of prehospital advanced airway management after emergency medical service-witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: nationwide observational study [J].
Park, Jeong Ho ;
Song, Kyoung Jun ;
Shin, Sang Do ;
Ro, Young Sun ;
Hong, Ki Jeong ;
Kong, So Yeon .
EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2019, 36 (09) :541-547
[39]   Association between early airway intervention in the pre-hospital setting and outcomes in out of hospital cardiac arrest patients: A post-hoc analysis of the Target Temperature Management-2 (TTM2) trial [J].
Battaglini, Denise ;
Schiavetti, Irene ;
Ball, Lorenzo ;
Jakobsen, Janus Christian ;
Lilja, Gisela ;
Friberg, Hans ;
Wendel-Garcia, Pedro David ;
Young, Paul J. ;
Eastwood, Glenn ;
Chew, Michelle S. ;
Unden, Johan ;
Thomas, Matthew ;
Joannidis, Michael ;
Nichol, Alistar ;
Lundin, Andreas ;
Hollenberg, Jacob ;
Hammond, Naomi ;
Saxena, Manoj ;
Martin, Annborn ;
Solar, Miroslav ;
Taccone, Fabio Silvio ;
Dankiewicz, Josef ;
Nielsen, Niklas ;
Grejs, Anders Morten ;
Wise, Matt P. ;
Hangghi, Matthias ;
Smid, Ondrej ;
Patroniti, Nicolo ;
Robba, Chiara .
RESUSCITATION, 2024, 203
[40]   Impact of different medical direction policies on prehospital advanced airway management for out-of hospital cardiac arrest patients: A retrospective cohort study [J].
Hongo, Takashi ;
Yumoto, Tetsuya ;
Naito, Hiromichi ;
Mikane, Takeshi ;
Nakao, Atsunori .
RESUSCITATION PLUS, 2022, 9