airway management in the icu rachel garvin, md assistant professor, neurosurgery neurocritical care...

45
AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Upload: collin-jones

Post on 13-Jan-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU

Rachel Garvin, MD

Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery

Neurocritical Care

October 5, 2012

Page 2: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

• Goals of this Lecture

To give you some comfort level with airways and tips to help your patient

Page 3: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Topics to be covered• Why airway is so important• Why patients with neurologic injury have airway issues• Airway Anatomy• Causes of compromised airway• Airway Evaluation• Airway Adjuncts• Drugs

Page 4: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Why is airway management so important in the NeuroICU?• Hypoxemia contributes to secondary brain injury• Brain injured patients have numerous reasons to have

airway compromise• You should have an understanding of basic airway

management to aid in your patient’s care

Page 5: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

• Study by Rincon et al looked at ARDS/ALI in TBI• Prevalence of 22% with mortality of 28%• Significant increase in prevalence over the past 20 years• More common in young white males

Page 6: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Neural control• Corticobulbar tract• Lower CN’s• Nucleus ambiguus • Several respiratory centers

• Dorsal medulla• Ventral medulla• Dorsal rostral pons

• C-spine/Upper T-spine

Page 7: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Why do neuro patients have respiratory failure?

• As a result of their primary injury• Due to secondary injury• Other injuries• Development of respiratory infection• Development of ARDS

Page 8: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

• Corral et al looked at non-neurologic complications in severe TBI patients

• Respiratory infections in 68% of severe TBI patients• Mortality not increased but hospital LOS, time on

mechanical ventilation increased

Page 9: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Why is it important to understand airway anatomy?• Airway Obstruction – where is it?• Will my rescue devices work?• What is happening in laryngospasm?• What if I need to crich someone?

Page 10: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Concerning Airway

Page 11: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Anatomy

Page 12: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Anatomy

Page 13: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Conditions that can compromise airway

• Degree of wakefulness• Aspiration• Body habitus• Concurrent injuries• Medications• Co-morbidities

Page 14: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Evaluation

Page 15: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Evaluation

Page 16: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Evaluation

Page 17: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012
Page 18: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Evaluation• Facial Features

• Beard, no teeth, buck teeth, dentures, recessed jaw

• Neck• Short neck, landmarks unclear

• Limited Mobility• C-collar, arthritis

Page 19: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Evaluation

Page 20: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

3-3-2 Rule

Page 21: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Quick Assessment: • Mouth: how much can they open it?• Tongue: how much can they protrude it?• Jaw: mobility• Neck: mobility

Page 22: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Airway Adjuncts – what you can do before calling anesthesia• Positioning• Plastic in orifices• Preoxygenate• Jaw Thrust• Check sedation

Page 23: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Positioning

Page 24: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Positioning

Page 25: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Plastic

Page 26: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Placing a nasal trumpet• Placed with bevel towards turbinates• Left sided goes in angled down• Right sided goes in facing upward and then turned

Page 27: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Placing an Oral Airway• Pick the appropriate size

• 3-4 for small adult, 4-5 medium, 5-6 large

• Insert facing upward and then rotate down• Do not use in an awake patient

Page 28: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Preoxygenate

Page 29: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Oxygen Delivery: High vs Low Flow• Nasal Cannula• Simple Face Mask• Nonrebreather Face Mask• Venti Mask

Flow does NOT = FiO2

Page 30: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

LMA

Page 31: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

BVM Technique

Page 32: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

BVM Technique

Page 33: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

If all else fails…..

Page 34: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

What drugs do you want?• Sedatives• Paralytics

Page 35: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Sedatives• Etomidate• Propofol• Ketamine

Page 36: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Etomidate• GABA like effects• Minimal effect on BP; can lower ICP• Can reduce plasma cortisol levels• Hepatic metabolism; renally excreted• Dose 0.3mg/kg

Page 37: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Propofol• Anesthetic agent• Respiratory and CV depressant can drop BP by as

much as 30%• Vasodilation and negative inotropic effect

• Dose is 1-1.5mg/kg

Page 38: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Ketamine• Anesthetic and dissociative agent• Hepatic metabolism• Can cause laryngeal spasm, hypertension• Emergence reaction give benzo with it• 1-2mg/kg

Page 39: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Paralytics• Succinylcholine• Vecuronium• Rocuronium• Cisatricurium

If you don’t think you can BVM someone, don’t paralyze them!!

Page 40: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Succinylcholine• Only depolarizing NMB• Avoid in hyperkalemia, 24 hour post major burn,

neuromuscular disease, patients with several days of ICU critical illness

• Onset in 60 seconds and lasts around 5 minutes• 1-1.5mg/kg

Page 41: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Rocuronium• Nondepolarizing• Onset about 90 seconds and last 30-40 minutes• Lasts longer in those with hepatic impairment• Dose is 0.6-1mg/kg• Effect is dose dependent

Page 42: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Vecuronium• Similar to rocuronium• Slower onset time (up to 4 minutes)• Lasts 40-60 minutes• 0.08-0.1mg-kg

Page 43: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Conclusion• Appropriate airway management is crucial in patients with

brain injury• Remember your airway anatomy and assessment in

patient evaluation• Use your adjuncts to help you• Be vigilant in the drugs being given to your patients if

intubation is required

Page 44: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

Questions?

Page 45: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT IN THE ICU Rachel Garvin, MD Assistant Professor, Neurosurgery Neurocritical Care October 5, 2012

References• Corral L, Casimiro JF, Ventura JL, Marcos P, Herrero JI, Manez R. Impact of non-neurologic

complications in severe traumatic brain injury outcome. Critical Care 2012; 16:R44.• Karanjia N, Nordquist D, Stevens R, Nyquist P. A Clinical Descriuption of Extubation Failure in

Patients with Primary Brain Injury. Neurocritical Care 2011; 15:4-12.• Rincon F, Ghosh S, Dey S, Maltenfort M, Vibbert M, Urtecho J, McBride W, Moussouttas M, Bell R,

Ratliff J, Jallo J. Impact of Acute Lung Injury and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome After Traumatic Brain Injury in the United States. Neurosurgery 2012; 71:795-803.

• Wong E, Yih-Yng Ng. The Difficult Airway in the Emergency Department. Int J Emerg Med, 2008: 1:107-111.