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- Christoph Eich, Markus Roessler, Marcus Nemeth, Sebastian G Russo, Jan F Heuer, and Arnd Timmermann.
- Department of Anaesthesiology, Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Centre, 37075 Göttingen, Germany. ceich@med.uni-goettingen.de
- Resuscitation. 2009 Dec 1;80(12):1371-7.
AimTo collect data regarding prehospital paediatric tracheal intubation by emergency physicians skilled in advanced airway management.MethodsA prospective 8-year observational study of a single emergency physician-staffed emergency medical service. Self-reporting by emergency physicians of all children aged 0-14 years who had prehospital tracheal intubation and were attended by either anaesthesia-trained emergency physicians (group 1) or by a mixture of anaesthesia and non-anaesthesia-trained emergency physicians (group 2).ResultsEighty-two out of 2040 children (4.0%) had prehospital tracheal intubation (58 in group 1). The most common diagnoses were trauma (50%; in school children, 73.0%), convulsions (13.4%) and SIDS (12.2%; in infants, 58.8%). The overall tracheal intubation success rate was 57 out of 58 attempts (98.3%). Compared to older children, infants had a higher number of Cormack-Lehane scores of 3 or 4, "difficult to intubate" status (both 3 out of 13; 23.1%) and a lower first attempt success rate for tracheal intubation (p=0.04). Among all 82 children 71 (86.6%) survived to hospital admission and 63 (76.8%) to discharge. Of the 63 survivors, 54 (85.7%) demonstrated a favourable or unchanged neurological outcome (PCPC 1-3). The survival and neurological outcomes of infants were inferior compared to older children (p<0.001). On average an emergency physician performed one prehospital tracheal intubation in 3 years in a child and one in 13 years in an infant.ConclusionsAnaesthesia-trained emergency physicians working in our system report high success rates for prehospital tracheal intubation in children. Survival and neurological outcomes were considerably better than reported in previous studies.
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