PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Failure to ventilate is a life-threatening condition
- Assess every patient for the possibility of difficult mask ventilation or intubation
- Always formulate a back-up plan in case of a failed attempt
- Do not fixate on intubation but rather successful ventilation and oxygenation
- Move to alternate airway management techniques and consider surgical airway if unable to intubate or ventilate despite use of airway adjuncts
Pediatric Considerations
- Oro- and nasopharyngeal airways are available in infant+ sizes
- LMAs are available in infant+ sizes
- Combitube is only designed for patients >48 in in height
- Nasotracheal intubation is contraindicated in children under 10 yr of age
ADDITIONAL READING
- Murphy MF. Airway management. In: Wolfson AB, Hendey G, Ling L, et al., eds.
Harwood-Nuss’ Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine
. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2009.
- Walls RM (ed).
Manual of Emergency Airway Management
. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2012
CODES
ICD9
- 96.01 Insertion of nasopharyngeal airway
- 96.02 Insertion of oropharyngeal airway
- 96.05 Other intubation of respiratory tract
ICD10
0CHY7BZ Insertion of Airway into Mouth and Throat, Via Natural or Artificial Opening
AIRWAY MANAGEMENT
Scott G. Weiner
•
Carlo L. Rosen
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Techniques that ensure adequate oxygenation and ventilation
- Oral and nasopharyngeal airways:
- Lift tongue off hypopharynx
- Facilitate bag-valve-mask (BVM) ventilation
- Insert when gag reflex is absent
- RSI:
- Preferred method for ED oral intubation (minimizes aspiration risk)
- Rapid induction of anesthesia and paralysis
- Contraindicated in patients who should not be paralyzed
- A preformulated backup strategy with alternative airway techniques is essential
- Use of fiberoptic techniques maximizes success
- Oral awake intubation:
- Oral intubation with sedation only
- Use when paralysis is contraindicated
- Ketamine is most commonly used
- Gum elastic bougie:
- Airway adjunct used when vocal cords are not well visualized
- Placement confirmed by feeling bougie bump against tracheal rings
- Slide endotracheal tube (ET) over bougie, then remove bougie
- Alternative airway devices:
- Extraglottic devices:
- Inserted blindly into oropharynx and inflated
- Laryngeal mask airway (LMA) forms a seal around glottic structures in hypopharynx.
- LMA offers less protection against aspiration than ET tube
- Intubating LMA can be used to place an ET tube
- Esophageal–tracheal tubes (e.g., Combitube, King LT) occlude the esophagus and ventilate the hypopharynx
- Video laryngoscopes:
- Fiberoptic camera on the tip of laryngoscope blade (e.g., Glidescope, C-MAC) or LMA to visualize tube placement
- Fiberoptic intubating stylets:
- Fiberoptic camera on the tip of a stylet which holds ET tube (e.g., Shikani)
- Classic fiberoptic intubation:
- ET tube placed over bronchoscope
- Nasotracheal or orotracheal approach
- Indications:
- Anatomic limitations to glottis visualization
- Limited mobility of mandible or cervical spine
- Unstable cervical spine injury
- Contraindications:
- Need for immediate airway management
- Significant oropharyngeal blood
- Nasotracheal intubation:
- Indications:
- Oral access impaired
- Unsuccessful oral intubation
- Paralysis is contraindicated
- Limited cervical mobility
- Contraindications:
- Apnea (only absolute contraindication)
- Anticoagulation
- Massive facial, nasal, or head trauma
- Upper airway abscess
- Epiglottitis
- Penetrating neck trauma
- Cricothyrotomy:
- Definitive treatment for a failed airway
- Incision in cricothyroid membrane
- Tracheostomy tube inserted percutaneously into the airway
- Indications:
- Crash airway when other airway attempts have failed
- Massive facial trauma
- Total upper airway obstruction
- Contraindications:
- Laryngeal crush injury
- Tracheal transection
- Relative: Expanding zone II or III hematoma
- Percutaneous translaryngeal ventilation (PTV):
- Percutaneous placement of 12G or 14G catheter through cricothyroid membrane
- Intermittent ventilation via high-pressure oxygen source
- Indications:
- Failed oral or nasal intubation until cricothyrotomy is complete
- Contraindications:
- Upper airway obstruction preventing expiration
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Clinical conditions requiring airway management:
- Failure to maintain or protect the airway:
- Oropharyngeal swelling
- Absent gag reflex
- Inability to clear secretions, blood
- Stridor
- Hypoxia or ventilatory failure:
- Shortness of breath
- Altered mental status
- Status epilepticus
- Anticipated clinical course:
- Ventilatory control for head injury or tricyclic overdose
- Sedation for diagnostic or therapeutic procedures
- Early management if the airway might become compromised
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Always be prepared with a difficult airway algorithm prior to beginning the procedure.
- Recognition of a difficult airway (LEMON)
- LOOK for anatomic considerations:
- Short mandible, thick neck, narrow mouth, large tongue, and protruding teeth
- Congenital syndromes, acromegaly
- Obesity
- EVALUATE 3-3-2 rule (difficult airway if met):
- Mouth opens <3 fingerbreadths
- Horizontal length of mandible <3 fingerbreadths
- Thyromental distance <2 fingerbreadths
- MALLAMPATI criteria (increasing difficulty):
- Class I: Soft palate, uvula, fauces, pillars visible
- Class II: Soft palate, uvula, fauces visible
- Class III: Soft palate visible
- Class IV: Hard palate only
- OBSTRUCTION from underlying disease states:
- Angioedema
- Goiter
- Laryngeal–tracheal tumors
- History of radiation therapy to the neck
- Infections (epiglottitis, supraglottitis, croup, intraoral or retropharyngeal abscess, Ludwig angina)
- Profuse upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage
- Trauma (facial, neck, cervical spine, laryngeal–tracheal, burns)
- NECK mobility limitation:
- Rheumatoid arthritis and other arthropathies that decrease cervical spine mobility
- Spinal immobilization for trauma
- Verification of correct tube placement:
- Visualization of tube passing through the vocal cords
- Tracheal tube depth (tube tip to upper incisors):
- 21 cm (women)
- 23 cm (men)
- Age (yr)/2 + 12 (children)
- End-tidal CO
2
colorimetric device:
- Changes color if CO
2
is present, indicating tracheal placement
- Color change may not be seen in cardiac arrest
- Auscultate over stomach, axillae, and anterior lung fields
- Observe chest wall movement
- Condensation in the tube during ventilation
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Pulse oximetry should rise after tracheal intubation
- Continuous capnography used as adjunct
- Arterial blood gas to manage ventilator settings after intubation
Imaging
CXR:
- To exclude mainstem bronchus intubation or pneumothorax
- Does not rule out esophageal intubation
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Direct visualization of the ET tube through the cords is gold standard.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Esophageal intubation
- Right or left mainstem bronchus intubation
- Extratracheal placement through tear in pyriform sinus or trachea
- Pneumothorax
TREATMENT