• J Emerg Med · Feb 2024

    Case Reports

    A Novel Intubation Technique: Bougie Introduction Via Ducanto Suction Catheter.

    • Nicholas Cochran-Caggiano, Jordan Holliday, and Cory Howard.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York.
    • J Emerg Med. 2024 Feb 1; 66 (2): 221224221-224.

    BackgroundAirway management is a defining skill that demands mastery by emergency physicians. Airway emergencies pose considerable morbidity and mortality risks. Familiarity with, and mastery of, a variety of airway management approaches and equipment can prove invaluable for management of anatomically and physiologically difficult airways.Case ReportA 67-year-old woman presented to a level II trauma after a motor vehicle collision. Emergency medical services reported left-sided injuries, including diminished breath sounds. She arrived in extremis with dyspnea and hypoxia refractory to supplemental oxygen. A portable chest x-ray study showed a considerable traumatic diaphragmatic hernia. Initial attempts at intubation via video laryngoscopy were unsuccessful. Difficulties were attributed to anatomic variation, possibly due to the traumatic diaphragmatic hernia, and hematemesis. The airway was repositioned after removal of a cervical collar and suction-assisted laryngoscopy airway decontamination was performed under video guidance. During airway decontamination, the tip of a DuCanto suction catheter (SSCOR) became located at the level of the vocal cords, prompting the decision to control the airway via utilization of the DuCanto suction catheter and a bougie. The suction tubing was disconnected, a bougie was inserted through the catheter, and the DuCanto was subsequently removed and replaced with a cuffed endotracheal tube. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Airway emergencies are imminent life threats. Familiarity with a variety of tools and techniques allows for definitive airway management via primary, back-up, and contingency plans to secure anatomically or physiologically difficult airway.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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