Difficult airway equipment in English emergency departments
- PMID: 10792145
- DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2044.2000.01362.x
Difficult airway equipment in English emergency departments
Abstract
The need for tracheal intubation in the emergency department is often unpredictable and precipitous in nature. When compared with the operating room, a higher incidence of difficult intubation is observed. There are currently no accepted guidelines with respect to the stocking of difficult airway equipment in the emergency department. We have conducted a telephone survey to determine the availability of equipment for the management of the difficult airway in English emergency departments. Overall, the majority of units held a curved laryngoscope blade (100%), gum elastic bougie (99%) and surgical airway device (98%). Of alternative devices for ventilation, a laryngeal mask airway was kept by 65% of departments, a needle cricothyroidostomy kit by 63% and an oesophageal-tracheal twin-lumen airway (Combitube) by 18%. Of alternative devices for intubation, fewer than 10% held a retrograde intubating kit, intubating laryngeal mask, bronchoscope or lighted stylet. Seventy-four per cent of departments held an end-tidal carbon dioxide detector.
Comment in
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Survey of airway management equipment in day surgery centres.Anaesthesia. 2002 Apr;57(4):407. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2044.2002.2575_6.x. Anaesthesia. 2002. PMID: 11949651 No abstract available.
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