• Resuscitation · Dec 2011

    Comparative Study

    Difficult prehospital endotracheal intubation - predisposing factors in a physician based EMS.

    • Jan Breckwoldt, Sebastian Klemstein, Bergit Brunne, Luise Schnitzer, Hans-Christian Mochmann, and Hans-Richard Arntz.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Perioperative Intensive Care Medicine, Benjamin Franklin Medical Center of Charité, University Medicine Berlin, Hindenburgdamm 30, D-12200 Berlin, Germany. jan.breckwoldt@charite.de
    • Resuscitation. 2011 Dec 1;82(12):1519-24.

    ObjectivesFor experienced personnel endotracheal intubation (ETI) is the gold standard to secure the airway in prehospital emergency medicine. Nevertheless, substantial procedural difficulties have been reported with a significant potential to compromise patients' outcomes. Systematic evaluation of ETI in paramedic operated emergency medical systems (EMS) and in a mixed physician/anaesthetic nurse EMS showed divergent results. In our study we systematically assessed factors associated with difficult ETI in an EMS exclusively operating with physicians.MethodsOver a 1-year period we prospectively collected data on the specific conditions of all ETIs of two physician staffed EMS vehicles. Difficult ETI was defined by more than 3 attempts or a difficult visualisation of the larynx (Cormack and Lehane grade 3, or worse). For each patient ETI conditions, biophysical characteristics and factors of the surrounding scene were assessed. Additionally, physicians were asked whether they had expected difficult ETI in advance.ResultsOut of 3979 treated patients 305 (7.7%) received ETI. For 276 patients complete data sets were available. The incidence of difficult ETI was 13.0%. In 4 cases (1.4%) ETI was impossible, but no patient was unable to be ventilated sufficiently. Predicting conditions for difficult intubation were limited surrounding space on scene (p<0.01), short neck (p<0.01), obesity (p<0.01), face and neck injuries (p<0.01), mouth opening<3 cm (p<0.01) and known ankylosing spondylitis (p<0.01). ETI on the floor or with C-spine immobilisation in situ were of no significant influence. The incidence of unexpected difficult ETI was 5.0%.ConclusionsIn a physician staffed EMS difficult prehospital ETI occurred in 13% of cases. Predisposing factors were limited surrounding space on scene and certain biophysical conditions of the patient (short neck, obesity, face and neck injuries, and anatomical restrictions). Unexpected difficult ETI occurred in 5% of the cases.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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