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      The difficult airway in the emergency department

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          Abstract

          Background

          The patient with difficult airways is a common challenge for emergency physicians.

          Aims

          Our goal was to study the reasons for difficult airways in the emergency department.

          Methods

          We performed a prospective observational study of patients requiring advanced airway management from 1 January 2000 to 31 December 2006.

          Results

          There were 2,343 patients who received advanced airway management of which 93 (4.0%) were deemed difficult. The main diagnoses were cardiac arrest (28), trauma (27) and congestive heart failure (10). The main reasons for the difficult airways were attributed to an anterior larynx (38, 40.9%), neck immobility (22, 23.7%) as well as the presence of secretions and blood (14, 15.1%). The mean number of attempts at intubation was 3.6 versus 1.2 for all cases. The mortality rate of 40.5% among patients with difficult airways was not different from that of all patients who had airway management (41%). There were seven (0.3%) failed airways. Anaesthetists performed 21 (22.6%) of the rescue airways while surgeons performed 5 (5.4%). Of the rescue strategies performed, 24 were through the use of the bougie, 3 by cricothyroidotomy, 4 by tracheostomy, 6 with the GlideScope and 3 with the laryngeal mask airway. The rest the airways were secured by tracheal intubation using the laryngoscope.

          Conclusions

          Emergency physicians manage most of the difficult airways successfully (68.8%). However, the success rate can be further improved through the more frequent use of the bougie or other rescue device. A possible suggestion would be for the emergency physician to use the bougie after the second or third attempt at direct orotracheal intubation.

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          Most cited references19

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          Practice guidelines for management of the difficult airway: an updated report by the American Society of Anesthesiologists Task Force on Management of the Difficult Airway.

          (2003)
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            Difficult tracheal intubation: a retrospective study.

            This is a retrospective study of patients whose tracheas were impossible to intubate on a previous occasion. There is a correlation between the degree of difficulty and the anatomy of the oropharynx in the same patient. The study was initially on obstetric patients but was extended to nonobstetric surgical patients in order to increase the number of cases investigated. The incidence of failed intubations in the obstetric group over a 3-year period was seven out of 1980 cases, whereas in the surgical group the results were six out of 13,380 patients. Any screening test which adds to our ability to predict difficulty in intubation must be welcomed, as failure to intubate can potentially lead to fatality.
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              The unanticipated difficult airway with recommendations for management.

              To review the current literature and generate recommendations on the role of newer technology in the management of the unanticipated difficult airway. A literature search using key words and filters of English language and English abstracted publications from 1990-96 contained in the Medline, Current Contents and Biological Abstracts databases was carried out. The literature was reviewed and condensed and a series of evidence-based recommendations were evolved. The unanticipated difficult airway occurs with a low but consistent incidence in anaesthesia practice. Difficult direct laryngoscopy occurs in 1.5-8.5% of general anaesthetics and difficult intubation occurs with a similar incidence. Failed intubation occurs in 0.13-0.3% general anaesthetics. Current techniques for predicting difficulty with laryngoscopy and intubation are sensitive, non-specific and have a low positive predictive value. Assessment techniques which utilize multiple characteristics to derive a risk factor tend to be more accurate predictors. Devices such as the laryngeal mask, lighted stylet and rigid fibreoptic laryngoscopes, in the setting of unanticipated difficult airway, are effective in establishing a patient airway, may reduce morbidity and are occasionally lifesaving. Evidence supports their use in this setting as either alternatives to facemask and bag ventilation, when it is inadequate to support oxygenation, or to the direct laryngoscope, when tracheal intubation has failed. Specifically, the laryngeal mask and Combitube have proved to be effective in establishing and maintaining a patent airway in "cannot ventilate" situations. The lighted stylet and Bullard (rigid) fibreoptic scope are effective in many instances where the direct laryngoscope has failed to facilitate tracheal intubation. The data also support integration of these devices into strategies to manage difficult airway as the new standard of care. Training programmes should ensure graduate physicians are trained in the use of these alternatives. Continuing medical education courses should allow physicians in practice the opportunity to train with these alternative devices.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +65-6321-3558 , +65-6321-4873 , evelyn.wong@sgh.com.sg
                Journal
                Int J Emerg Med
                International Journal of Emergency Medicine
                Springer-Verlag (London )
                1865-1372
                1865-1380
                29 May 2008
                29 May 2008
                June 2008
                : 1
                : 2
                : 107-111
                Affiliations
                Department of Emergency Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Outram Road, Singapore, 169608 Singapore
                Article
                30
                10.1007/s12245-008-0030-6
                2657243
                19384660
                07eda6f9-a16b-4b1b-9667-40cbc053ea37
                © Springer-Verlag London Ltd 2008
                History
                : 29 January 2008
                : 29 April 2008
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag London Ltd 2008

                Emergency medicine & Trauma
                laryngoscopy,intubation,tracheostomy,airway,cricothyroidotomy
                Emergency medicine & Trauma
                laryngoscopy, intubation, tracheostomy, airway, cricothyroidotomy

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