Patient with known tracheal stenosis, hybercarbic (Co2 in the 70s) on 10L non-rebreather. BP is ~100/50, O2 sat at ~90%. Floor team wants him intubated. How do you proceed?
I can give you the academic answer but in all honesty this is the way im gonna do it:
Tracheal stenosis = ENT problem
My job is to insure patient doesnt die before ENT makes their assessment.
Inhouse call ENT: Easy. Let them make a quick assessment, agree on a plan, and take it from there with all the bat airway gadgets.
Outhouse call ENT (my current gig): makes my job a bit tougher but Ill
still keep it simple.
Step 1: Smoothly call whatever backup anesthesia personal you have available and make sure they bring a difficult airway cart. Then call any ol surgeon to be around, but make sure they dont talk or lose their ****. They dont even need to be physically in the room, just "around".
Step 2: Keep calm and DO NOT make it look like its a big deal. This is very very important. I cant stress that enough.
Step 3: Have someone who knows what they are doin assist bag the patient every time they take a breathe.
Step 4: Before reaching for your bat gadgets, casually take out these 3 items out of your difficult airway cart: LMA#4, LMA#5, and 4.0 cuff tube. I
f patient becomes hypoxic, try each one of those items in that exact order. If all 3 fail, call that surgeon in the room and take one last attempt with a bat gadget before proceeding to an invasive airway. However if pt maintains sats,
DO NOT do anything with the airway.
Step 5: Make some jokes, laugh a little, and keep overall stress level very very low.. All while using your bat detective skills to get a little history.
Step 6: ENT makes it there, let them make an assessment. Agree on a plan and proceed with the bat gadgets.
Chance of patient living will usually be pretty high.
How to severely decrease patient's chance of living:
A) Losing your **** or becoming inpatient. Staff stress level increases letting your run of the mill **** show spiral into a cluster f*ck. Things will go sour very fast, you can bet on that. This usually ends with bloody airways, yelling over each other, jamming whatever you can in the airway, M&M lecture preparation.
B) Walk in with some serious swagger and think you are mr know it all professor airway. Talking about PaO2 dissociation curves, talking down to RT, looking at CT scans and proceeding with fiberoptics and retrograde intubations because who needs ENT. Again this usually results in bloody airways, yelling over each other, jamming whatever you can in the airway, M&M lecture preparation.
C) Allow loud mouth outspoken nurses, CRNAs, other anesthesiologists derail the overall calmness and push you into either A or B.
So my point... I will do nothing without an ENT assessment unless I absolutely have to... Once I have that, then we can discuss this case further.