Airway Management in Trauma

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Trauma Airway: Initial Assessment - Red Alert Airways

  • Key Challenges: C-spine injury (MILS vital), full stomach (aspiration risk), facial/neck trauma, shock, ↓GCS. Anticipate difficult airway.
  • Assessment:
    • 📌 LEMON for difficult airway:
      • Look: Facial trauma, small mouth, dentures.
      • Evaluate: 3-3-2 rule (mouth opening, hyomental, thyromental distances).
      • Mallampati: Often impractical/deferred.
      • Obstruction: Stridor, hematoma, foreign body.
      • Neck mobility: Assume limited (C-spine).
  • Red Alerts (Impending Loss/Difficult Airway):
    • Stridor, hoarseness, gurgling.
    • Subcutaneous emphysema, crepitus.
    • GCS < 8.
    • SpO2 < 90% despite O2.
    • Severe maxillofacial/neck trauma (e.g., Le Fort II/III).
    • Expanding neck hematoma. LEMON mnemonic for assessing airway difficulty

⭐ Assume C-spine injury in ALL trauma patients; maintain Manual In-Line Stabilisation (MILS) during airway management to prevent secondary neurological injury.

Trauma Airway: Adjuncts & Techniques - Lifesaving Lineup

  • Airway Adjuncts:
    • Oropharyngeal Airway (OPA): For unconscious patients, no gag reflex. Size: incisors to angle of jaw.
    • Nasopharyngeal Airway (NPA): For conscious/semiconscious patients. Size: nares to tragus. ⚠️ Avoid if basal skull fracture.
    • Supraglottic Airways (SGA, e.g., LMA, i-gel): Rescue device, difficult airway, bridge to ETT.
  • Laryngoscopy:
    • Direct Laryngoscopy (DL): Standard technique. Manual In-Line Stabilization (MILS) crucial.
    • Video Laryngoscopy (VL): Improved view, less C-spine movement. Preferred in suspected C-spine injury.
  • Endotracheal Intubation (ETT):
    • Confirmation: 📌 Capnography (EtCO₂ - gold standard), Chest rise (bilateral), Condensation in tube. Auscultate: air entry, no gastric sounds.
    • ETT cuff pressure: 20-30 cm H₂O to prevent aspiration & tracheal injury.
    • Secure ETT firmly.

Oral and Nasal Airways

⭐ Continuous waveform capnography is the most reliable method to confirm and monitor endotracheal tube placement.

Trauma Airway: RSI Protocol - Go-Time Protocol

RSI for trauma airway. MILS if C-spine suspected. 📌 "7 P's of RSI" guides this.

  • Induction Agents:
    • Etomidate: 0.3 mg/kg IV (cardio-stable).
    • Ketamine: 1-2 mg/kg IV (hypotension/bronchospasm).
  • Neuromuscular Blockers (NMB):
    • Succinylcholine: 1-1.5 mg/kg IV (rapid; ⚠️ hyperkalemia risk: crush/burns >24h).
    • Rocuronium: 1-1.2 mg/kg IV (alternative, longer).

⭐ Ketamine is often preferred in hemodynamically unstable trauma patients due to its sympathomimetic properties, but caution with isolated severe TBI.

Trauma Airway: Difficult Airway - SOS Airways

  • Difficult Airway (DA) Predictors (Trauma):

    • C-spine immobilization, facial/neck trauma, burns.
    • LMO, airway blood/vomit, agitation.
    • 📌 LEMON (adapted): Look, Evaluate 3-3-2, Mallampati, Obstruction, Neck mobility.
  • SOS Airway Management (CICO Protocol):

    • Recognize failure: Max 2-3 intubation attempts or failed oxygenation.
    • Call for HELP (senior anesthesiologist, surgeon).
    • Oxygenation pathway: FMV → SGA. If both fail & CICO confirmed → FONA.
  • Surgical Airway (FONA - Front of Neck Access):
    • Indication: CICO.
    • Preferred: Surgical cricothyroidotomy (scalpel-bougie, ET tube size 6.0 mm).
    • Needle cricothyroidotomy: temporary, for oxygenation; barotrauma risk.

⭐ In CICO, immediate surgical cricothyroidotomy is life-saving and must not be delayed.

Surgical Cricothyroidotomy Steps

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • C-spine immobilization is paramount during all airway interventions.
  • Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) is standard for trauma, assuming a full stomach.
  • Anticipate difficult airway; have backup devices and surgical airway ready.
  • Ketamine is preferred for induction in hemodynamically unstable trauma.
  • Avoid nasotracheal intubation in suspected basal skull fracture or severe midface trauma.
  • Maintain Manual In-Line Stabilization (MILS) during laryngoscopy and intubation.
  • Capnography (EtCO2) is essential to confirm endotracheal tube placement.

Practice Questions: Airway Management in Trauma

Test your understanding with these related questions

A patient is admitted following a road traffic accident. He has sustained significant blunt injury to his head, chest and abdomen and has a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 8/15. His saturations are poor at 89% on 15 L of oxygen a rebreathing mask. You note bruising around both eyes and blood-stained fluid issuing from his left ear, which forms concentric circles when dripped on a white sheet. You wish to support his airway to improve oxygenation. The first choice of airway adjunct would be

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Flashcards: Airway Management in Trauma

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Incidence of coagulopathy in massive transfusion can be minimized by infusing _____, platelets, and RBCs in a 1:1:1 ratio

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Incidence of coagulopathy in massive transfusion can be minimized by infusing _____, platelets, and RBCs in a 1:1:1 ratio

fresh frozen plasma

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