• Ann Emerg Med · Mar 2000

    Emergency airway management in penetrating neck injury.

    • D P Mandavia, S Qualls, and I Rokos.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90033, USA. mandavia@usc.edu
    • Ann Emerg Med. 2000 Mar 1;35(3):221-5.

    Study ObjectivesAirway management in the context of penetrating neck injury is a challenging scenario. Management decisionmaking has not been well studied and the initial airway approach remains controversial. We examined various initial emergency airway techniques and their success in the setting of penetrating neck trauma.MethodsA retrospective study was conducted of emergency department intubations in penetrating neck injury from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 1996, at a Level I trauma center. Cases of out-of-hospital traumatic arrest or out-of-hospital intubation were excluded. Successful airway management was defined as endotracheal tube placement confirmed by clinical evaluation, pulse oximetry, chest radiography, and end-tidal CO(2) detection.ResultsDuring the study period, 748 consecutive patients with penetrating neck injury were evaluated in the ED. Of these, 82 (11%) were deemed to require immediate airway management. Twenty-four of the 82 were excluded because of out-of-hospital traumatic arrest or out-of-hospital intubation, resulting in a study population of 58 patients. Of these 58 patients, 39 had initial rapid sequence intubation using succinylcholine with a 100% success rate. Five comatose patients had successful orotracheal intubation without paralysis, and 2 patients underwent successful emergency tracheostomy. The remaining 12 patients had initial fiberoptic intubation by otolaryngology clinicians, which was unsuccessful in 3 patients. All 3 of these patients were subsequently successfully orotracheally intubated using the rapid sequence intubation technique. Therefore, oral endotracheal intubation was the definitive method of airway management in 47 (81%) of the 58 patients and was successful in all cases.ConclusionRapid sequence intubation was the most commonly performed initial technique by emergency physicians and was safe and effective in all cases attempted. Furthermore, rapid sequence intubation methodology resulted in successful intubation of the fiberoptic intubation failures. Physicians with airway expertise should consider using rapid sequence intubation as an initial airway technique in managing patients with penetrating neck injury who require airway control.

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