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Pediatric Respiratory Emergencies
Pediatric Respiratory Emergencies

... • Treat symptoms, not the disease • Kids in respiratory distress needs oxygenation as uncorrected respiratory distress deteriorates to bradycardia & cardiac arrest • Priority is to support breathing effort – Remember the basics! ...
Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome
Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome

...  Surgery recommended for pets with significant clinical signs  Emergency presentation with pet in severe breathing distress requires rapid medical intervention, including oxygen supplementation ...
Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome
Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome

...  Surgery recommended for pets with significant clinical signs  Emergency presentation with pet in severe breathing distress requires rapid medical intervention, including oxygen supplementation  If the pet has high body temperature (hyperthermia), cool with iced water and by directing a fan to bl ...
brachycephalic_airway_syndrome
brachycephalic_airway_syndrome

...  Surgery recommended for pets with significant clinical signs  Emergency presentation with pet in severe breathing distress requires rapid medical intervention, including oxygen supplementation ...
Respiratory system
Respiratory system

... Administer O2 before inserting catheter WHY? Moisten cath in sterile water and insert through nose or mouth before applying suction Apply suction as the catheter is withdrawn from the airway Maintain pressure gauge b/w 80-100 mmHg Limit EACH pass to 10 seconds Allow the patient to rest briefly, enco ...
Neonatal Anesthesia
Neonatal Anesthesia

... •Oral Vs nasal? (lateral/prone/limited head access) •Straight blade- go deeper then withdraw •Level: term neonate (9cm oral/11cm nasal), 1 year 11-12cm •Leak pressure? 20-25cmH2O, affected by head position& MR •50% decrease in flow from size 3.5 to 3 •Non-cuffed/cuffed: 8y (upper abdominal & thoraci ...
Obstructive and restrictive Lung Disease
Obstructive and restrictive Lung Disease

... • WHICH LESION LIMITS INSPIRATORY FLOW THE MOST? • A: VARIABLE UPPER AIRWAY EXTRATHORACIC OBSTRUCTION • B: VARIABLE UPPER AIRWAY INTRATHORACIC OBSTRUCTION • C: COPD • D: ASTHMA ...
Emergency endotracheal intubation in children Author: Joshua
Emergency endotracheal intubation in children Author: Joshua

... All topics are updated as new evidence becomes available and our peer review process is complete. Literature review current through: Oct 2016. | This topic last updated: Jun 29, 2015. INTRODUCTION — Emergency endotracheal intubation may be performed in the prehospital setting, as well as in emergenc ...
- SCHHS Emergency Department
- SCHHS Emergency Department

... 2: List 2 further important findings you would look for on examination of this man’s nose Soon after this photo was taken he begins to bleed briskly from the L nostril. 3: Outline your approach to managing his epistaxis. 4: List your criteria urgent transfer to an ENT service. ...
Airway Clearance Techniques in Cystic Fibrosis
Airway Clearance Techniques in Cystic Fibrosis

... Ability to exercise related more to muscle mass than to pulmonary function Improves oxygen uptake by muscle cells ...
Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine > Section 3: Resuscitative Problems and Techniques... Chapter 18. Noninvasive Airway Management >
Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine > Section 3: Resuscitative Problems and Techniques... Chapter 18. Noninvasive Airway Management >

... BiPAP is a method of NIPPV where positive airway pressure is used to assist the patient's spontaneous ventilation at a "bilevel." The positive airway pressure increases during inspiration and a positive expiratory pressure provides the physiological positive endexpiratory pressure known as PEEP. BiP ...
Preoxygenation, Reoxygenation, and Delayed Sequence Intubation
Preoxygenation, Reoxygenation, and Delayed Sequence Intubation

... is taken up by pulmonary blood; further shunt is the result (21). The use of NIV ventilation with CPAP can maintain these alveoli in an open state during the apneic period. When NIV is combined with a jaw thrust and patent oro/nasopharyngeal passage of air, the potential benefits of apneic oxygenati ...
Dr Rafaat, can you do one CT guided Biopsy before you go home?
Dr Rafaat, can you do one CT guided Biopsy before you go home?

... Small dose ketamine (0.25mg/kg) and glyco if sedation was necessary I know, I know….. Fentanyl and Midaz would potentially lead to respiratory depression (especially in doses sufficient to allow pt to remain still), and propofol may increase venous capacitance, leading to even poorer venous return. ...
general protocols
general protocols

...  Provider cannot achieve/maintain proper head alignment.  Cannot ventilate with an adequate tidal volume.  Cannot achieve/maintain an adequate mask seal.  Too much air is entering the stomach. 5. For BLS providers- Utilize the Blind Insertion Airway Device (Combitube, King) to achieve a patent a ...
General Protocols rev Aug 2016
General Protocols rev Aug 2016

... • Provider cannot achieve/maintain proper head alignment. • Cannot ventilate with an adequate tidal volume. • Cannot achieve/maintain an adequate mask seal. • Too much air is entering the stomach. 5. For BLS providers- Utilize the Blind Insertion Airway Device (Combitube, King) to achieve a patent a ...
Document
Document

... liters) by the change in lung pressure (in centimeters of water). 3.___ In the erect adult, more air exchange occurs in the lower regions of the lungs than in the higher regions of the lungs because of gravity. 4.___ A spinal cord injury patient may experience respiratory dysfunction as a result of ...
the use of fiberoptic endoscopy in anesthesia
the use of fiberoptic endoscopy in anesthesia

... lung (one-lung ventilation). This is especially important during a thoracoscopic procedure in which surgical exposure (visibility and space) is of prime importance. Regional anesthesia for patients undergoing VATS is possible but is not desirable as mediastinal shift and paradoxical respiration occu ...
Current Medication Practice and Tracheal Intubation Safety
Current Medication Practice and Tracheal Intubation Safety

... To minimize the occurrence of adverse TIAEs, specific sets of medications are selected for children with specific TI risks. Vagolytic (antimuscarinic) medications, such as atropine or glycopyrrolate, are often used to prevent sinus bradycardia or atrioventricular block associated with laryngoscopy, ...
Airway Management
Airway Management

... Removal via Direct laryngoscopy ...
Difficult Airway Management Following Severe Gasoline Burn Injury
Difficult Airway Management Following Severe Gasoline Burn Injury

... intubate the trachea using a size 3 Macintosh laryngoscope blade. During each attempt the view of the larynx was Cormack-Lehane grade 4. Several attempts at blind intubation were then performed, but without success. The patient was then ventilated with 100% oxygen by bag-valve-mask device until a vi ...
Intubations in the ER
Intubations in the ER

... This will depend on the patient condition. Before intubation, have someone get and hook up the ventilator. Remember to put an in-line EtCO2 monitor on the circuit. If not using in line EtCO2, then after 8 breaths with bag mask, or 8 ventilations with ventilator, use the colorimetric CO2 monitor to ...
Hahnemann University Hospital, Philadelphia College of
Hahnemann University Hospital, Philadelphia College of

... Additionally, it is necessary to discuss that the iatrogenic injury in this case had been repaired with wire. Many alternative techniques for laryngotracheal iatrogenic injury management are described in the literature including absorbable suture, nonabsorbable suture and close observation. Another ...
Type II Respiratory Failure
Type II Respiratory Failure

... underlying hypoxia is left untreated. This leads to worsening acidemia, fatiguing respiratory muscles, failing right ventricle, arrhythmias, myocardial ischemia, cerebral injury, and respiratory arrest. ...
A case of a neonate with a congenital laryngeal web
A case of a neonate with a congenital laryngeal web

... Neonatal airway lesions can lead to significant airway compromise and are best approached with a collaborative team effort between the anesthesiologist, neonatal intensive care unit, and surgeon. Congenital laryngeal webs oftentimes present in infancy with aphonia, though when less severe may be an ...
Serotonin syndrome: A literature review of therapeutic
Serotonin syndrome: A literature review of therapeutic

... – Airway control more important – What to do? ...
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Tracheal intubation



Tracheal intubation, usually simply referred to as intubation, is the placement of a flexible plastic tube into the trachea (windpipe) to maintain an open airway or to serve as a conduit through which to administer certain drugs. It is frequently performed in critically injured, ill or anesthetized patients to facilitate ventilation of the lungs, including mechanical ventilation, and to prevent the possibility of asphyxiation or airway obstruction.The most widely used route is orotracheal, in which an endotracheal tube is passed through the mouth and vocal apparatus into the trachea. In a nasotracheal procedure, an endotracheal tube is passed through the nose and vocal apparatus into the trachea. Other methods of intubation involve surgery and include the cricothyrotomy (used almost exclusively in emergency circumstances) and the tracheotomy, used primarily in situations where a prolonged need for airway support is anticipated.Because it is an invasive and extremely uncomfortable medical procedure, intubation is usually performed after administration of general anesthesia and a neuromuscular-blocking drug. It can however be performed in the awake patient with local or topical anesthesia, or in an emergency without any anesthesia at all. Intubation is normally facilitated by using a conventional laryngoscope, flexible fiberoptic bronchoscope or video laryngoscope to identify the vocal cords and pass the tube between them into the trachea instead of into the esophagus. Other devices and techniques may be used alternatively.After the trachea has been intubated, a balloon cuff is typically inflated just above the far end of the tube to help secure it in place, to prevent leakage of respiratory gases, and to protect the tracheobronchial tree from receiving undesirable material such as stomach acid. The tube is then secured to the face or neck and connected to a T-piece, anesthesia breathing circuit, bag valve mask device, or a mechanical ventilator.Once there is no longer a need for ventilatory assistance and/or protection of the airway, the tracheal tube is removed; this is referred to as extubation of the trachea (or decannulation, in the case of a surgical airway such as a cricothyrotomy or a tracheotomy).For centuries, tracheotomy was considered the only reliable method for intubation of the trachea. However, because only a minority of patients survived the operation, physicians undertook tracheotomy only as a last resort, on patients who were nearly dead. It was not until the late 19th century however that advances in understanding of anatomy and physiology, as well an appreciation of the germ theory of disease, had improved the outcome of this operation to the point that it could be considered an acceptable treatment option.Also at that time, advances in endoscopic instrumentation had improved to such a degree that direct laryngoscopy had become a viable means to secure the airway by the non-surgical orotracheal route. By the mid-20th century, the tracheotomy as well as endoscopy and non-surgical tracheal intubation had evolved from rarely employed procedures to becoming essential components of the practices of anesthesiology, critical care medicine, emergency medicine, laryngology.Tracheal intubation can be associated with minor complications such as broken teeth or lacerations of the tissues of the upper airway. It can also be associated with potentially fatal complications such as pulmonary aspiration of stomach contents which can result in a severe and sometimes fatal chemical aspiration pneumonitis, or unrecognized intubation of the esophagus which can lead to potentially fatal anoxia. Because of this, the potential for difficulty or complications due to the presence of unusual airway anatomy or other uncontrolled variables is carefully evaluated before undertaking tracheal intubation. Alternative strategies for securing the airway must always be readily available.
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