Trauma unit emergency doctor airway management
- PMID: 17985058
Trauma unit emergency doctor airway management
Abstract
Objectives: To audit indications for and practice (in terms of training/qualification) of definitive airway management compared with current UK practices.
Design: Consecutive observational study.
Setting: Tygerberg Academic Hospital Trauma Service, Western Cape.
Subjects: All trauma patients either arriving intubated or requiring intubation at the Trauma unit during the period 1 - 31 August 2006.
Outcome measures: A data collection proforma was completed either at the time of intubation or from medical records. Results. Fifty-seven patients required definitive airway management. In the unit 32 patients (56%) were intubated by emergency medicine registrars or medical officers, with rapid sequence intubations (RSIs) in all 32 (100%). Seven patients (12.3%) were intubated by paramedics pre-hospital, and 18 patients (31.6%) were intubated at referring hospitals by non-anaesthetists. Endotracheal intubation was successful in 55 patients (96.4%). Two patients (3.6%) could not be intubated and therefore underwent surgical cricothyroidotomy at the unit. Clinical outcomes included 12 patients (21%) extubated for ward transfer, 7 patients (12.3%) admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU), 21 patients (36.8%) taken for surgery, and 17 patients (29.8%) died. Motor vehicle accident (MVA) was the predominant mechanism of injury, accounting for 30 (52.6%) patients, while 16 patients (28.1%) had penetrating injuries (gunshot and/or stab wounds), 6 patients (10.5%) had blunt trauma, and the remaining 5 patients (8.8%) suffered serious burns.
Conclusion: The most common indication for intubation was a Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) of less than 8, typically in the polytrauma patient with suspected head injury due to MVA. Emergency doctors managed 100% of definitive airway in-hospital, and RSI was the favoured method. This differs greatly from the UK where non-anaesthetists only perform between 31% and 56% of trauma intubations, with the rest performed by anaesthetists. Outcome was, however, similar to that described in the literature.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Medical