| Literature DB >> 29351759 |
Luca Cabrini1,2, Giovanni Landoni1,2, Martina Baiardo Redaelli1, Omar Saleh1, Carmine D Votta1, Evgeny Fominskiy1,3, Alessandro Putzu4, Cézar Daniel Snak de Souza5, Massimo Antonelli6, Rinaldo Bellomo7,8, Paolo Pelosi9, Alberto Zangrillo1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We performed a systematic review of randomized controlled studies evaluating any drug, technique or device aimed at improving the success rate or safety of tracheal intubation in the critically ill.Entities:
Keywords: Critically ill; Emergency department; High flow nasal cannula; Intensive care unit; Tracheal intubation; Videolaryngoscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29351759 PMCID: PMC5775615 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1927-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Characteristics of the five studies on pre-oxygenation techniques
| 1st Author | Journal, year | Setting | Patients’ characteristics | Pre-oxygenation intervention | Pre-oxygenation comparator | Primary outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baillard C et al. [ | Am J Resp Crit Care Med, 2006 | ICU | Severely hypoxemic patients | Pre-oxygenation with NIV | Pre-oxygenation nonrebreather bag-valve mask driven by 15 L/min oxygen. Patients were allowed to breath spontaneously with occasional assistance | Mean drop in SpO2 during ETI | SpO2 values were significantly better in the NIV group after pre-oxygenation, during intubation, and 5 min after intubation Episodes of SpO2 < 80% were significantly less common in the NIV group ( |
| Vourc’h M et al. [ | Intensive Care Med, 2015 | ICU | Severely hypoxemic patients | Pre-oxygenation and apneic oxygenation with HFNC (maintained during laryngoscopy) | HFO by facemask followed by no supplemental O2 during laryngoscopy | Lowest SpO2 throughout intubation procedure | No significant difference in any peri-procedural oxygenation parameter. Duration of mechanical ventilation was shorter in the HFNC group. |
| Jaber S et al. [ | Intensive Care Med, 2016 | ICU | Severely hypoxemic patients | Pre-oxygenation with NIV plus HFNC, then apneic oxygenation with HFNC (maintained during laryngoscopy) | Pre-oxygenation with NIV plus sham HFNC, then apneic oxygenation with sham HFNC (maintained during laryngoscopy) | Lowest SpO2 during ETI | Lowest SpO2 during intubation higher in the intervention group. In per-protocol analysis, fewer severe desaturation episodes in the intervention group. |
| Simon M et al. [ | Resp Care, 2016 | ICU | Severely hypoxemic patients | Pre-oxygenation with HFNC, then apneic oxygenation with HFNC (maintained during laryngoscopy) | Bag -valve mask and no supplemental O2 during laryngoscopy | Mean lowest SpO2 during ETI | No difference at any time points in SpO2 or pCO2, and in procedural-related complications. |
| Semler MW et al. [ | Am J Resp Crit Care Med, 2016 | ICU | Critically ill patients | Not standardized pre-oxygenation followed by apneic oxygenation with HFNC during laryngoscopy | Not standardized pre-oxygenation and no supplemental O2 during laryngoscopy | Lowest SpO2 between induction and 2 min after ETI | No significant difference in any peri-procedural oxygenation parameter. No difference in short-term and hospital mortality. |
| Caputo N et al. [ | Acad Emerg Med, 2017 | ED | Critically ill patients | Standard 3-min pre-oxygenation followed by apneic oxygenation with HFNC during laryngoscopy | Standard 3-min pre-oxygenation and no supplemental O2 during laryngoscopy | Average lowest SpO2 during apnea and in the following 2 minutes | No difference in lowest average SpO2, no difference in SpO2 at any time-point, no difference in the rates of moderate or severe desaturation episodes. |
Abbreviations: ICU intensive care unit, ETI endotracheal intubation, NIV non invasive ventilation, HFNC high-flow nasal cannula, HFO high-flow oxygen, SpO peripheral oxygen saturation, PaO arterial oxygen pressure, ED emergency department
Characteristics of the nine studies comparing videolaryngoscopy to direct laryngoscopy
| 1st author | Journal, year | Setting | Patients’ characteristics | Personnel performing ETI | Videolaryngoscope model | Primary outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yeatts DJ et al. [ | J of Trauma and Acute Care Surg, 2013 | Trauma resuscitation unit | Adult critically ill trauma patients | Emergency medicine residents, anesthesiology residents, attending anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetist | GlideScope | Survival to hospital discharge | No difference in the subgroup with anticipated difficult airways. Higher incidence of severe desaturation and worse mortality in the subgroup of head-injured patients intubated with videolaryngoscope |
| Griesdale DEG et al. [ | Can J Anesth, 2012 | ICU, ordinary ward, ED | Adult critically ill patients | Medical students or non-anesthesiology residents | GlideScope | Number of intubation attempts | No difference in intubation attempts. Significantly better visualization in the videolaryngoscope group, but lowest SaO2 during first attempt |
| Kim JW et al. [ | Resuscitation, 2016 | ED | Adult patients in cardiac arrest | Experienced intubators | GlideScope | Success rate of ETI by the intubator | No difference in the incidence of esophageal intubation and tooth injury. Chest compression interruption during CPR were longer in the direct laryngoscopy group |
| Goksu E et al. [ | Turk J Emerg Med, 2016 | ED | Blunt trauma patients | Residents and attending physicians of the ED | C-MAC | Overall successful intubation | Better glottis visualization and decreased esophageal intubation rate with videolaringoscopy. No difference in success rate even separating easy and difficult intubations |
| Janz DR et al. [ | Crit Care Med, 2016 | ICU | Adult critically ill patients | Pulmonary and critical care fellows | McGrath Mac or GlideScope or Olympus | Intubation on first attempt, adjusted for the operator’s previous experience | Better glottis visualization with videolaryngoscopy. No other differences |
| Driver BE et al. [ | Acad EmergMed, 2016 | ED | Adult critically ill patients | Senior residents | C-MAC | First-pass success rate | No difference in duration of first attempt, aspiration, hospital length of stay. No difference in success rate in the subgroup with anticipated difficult airways |
| Sulser S et al. [ | Eur J Anaesth, 2016 | ED | Adult critically ill patients | Experienced anesthesia consultants | C-MAC | First attempt success rate | Better glottis visualization in the videolaryngoscopy group. No difference in desaturation episodes or complications |
| Lascarrou JB et al [ | JAMA, 2017 | ICU | Adult critically ill | ICU physicians | McGrath Mac | Successful first-pass intubation | Better glottis visualization, but higher number of life-threatening complications with videolariyngoscopy. No difference in success rate even stratified for operator experience and expected difficult airways. No difference in number of intubation |
| Silverberg MJ et al. [ | Crit Care Med, 2015 | ICU and ordinary wards | Adult critically ill patients | Pulmonary and critical care fellows | GlideScope | First-attempt success rate | Better glottis visualization and lower number of attempts in the videolaryngoscopy group. No difference in overall complications rate. Neuromuscular blocking agents were not used |
Abbreviations: ICU intensive care unit, ETI endotracheal intubation, SpO peripheral oxygen saturation, CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Fig. 1Videolaryngoscopy vs. direct laryngoscopy: forest plot for intubation time (a) and for first-attempt successful intubation (b)