| Literature DB >> 32967700 |
Ramandeep Kaur1, Tyler T Weiss1, Andrew Perez1, James B Fink1, Rongchang Chen2, Fengming Luo3, Zongan Liang3, Sara Mirza1, Jie Li4.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an emerging viral infection that is rapidly spreading across the globe. SARS-CoV-2 belongs to the same coronavirus class that caused respiratory illnesses such as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). During the SARS and MERS outbreaks, many frontline healthcare workers were infected when performing high-risk aerosol-generating medical procedures as well as when providing basic patient care. Similarly, COVID-19 disease has been reported to infect healthcare workers at a rate of ~ 3% of cases treated in the USA. In this review, we conducted an extensive literature search to develop practical strategies that can be implemented when providing respiratory treatments to COVID-19 patients, with the aim to help prevent nosocomial transmission to the frontline workers.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosol-generating procedures; Nosocomial infection; Respiratory care
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32967700 PMCID: PMC7509502 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-03231-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Use of respiratory interventions in COVID-19 patient population
| Study | Huang et al. [ | Wu et al. [ | Wang et al. [ | Guan et al. [ | Yang et al. [ | Arentz et al. [ | Grasseli et al. [ | Richardson et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prospective cohort, single center | Retrospective cohort, single center | Retrospective, single-center case series | Retrospective data from 552 hospitals in China | Retrospective cohort, single center | Retrospective cohort, single center | Retrospective case series | Retrospective case series | |
| Confirmed COVID-19 cases from Dec 16, 2019, to Jan 2, 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 cases from Dec 25, 2019, to Jan 26, 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 cases from Jan 1 to Jan 28, 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 cases through January 29, 2020 | Critically illb confirmed COVID-19 cases from late Dec 2019 to Jan 26, 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 cases admitted to ICU from Feb 20 to March 5, 2020 | Critically ill laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases from Feb 20 to March 18, 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 cases admitted to 12 hospitals in New York City from March 1 to April 4, 2020 | |
| 49 (IQR, 41–58) | 51 (IQR, 43–60) | 56 (IQR, 42–68) | 47 (IQR 35–58) | 59.7 (± 13.3) | 70 (IQR, 43–92) | 63 (IQR, 56–70) | 63 (IQR, 52–75) | |
| 13 (32%) | 53 (26.4%) | 36 (26%) | 55 (5%) | 52 (100%) | 21 (100%) | 1591 (100%) | 373/2634 (14.2%) | |
| 12 (29%) | 84 (41.8%) | 27 (19.6%) | 37 (3.4%) | 35 (67%) | 20 (95%) | NR | NR | |
| 27 (66%) | 98 (49%) | 106 (77%) | 454 (41.3%) | NR | NR | 13/1300 (1%) | 1584/5693 (27.8%) | |
| 10 (24%)a | NR | NR | NR | 33 (63.5%) | 1 (4.8%) | NR | NR | |
| 10 (24%)a | 61 (30%) | 15 (10.9%) | 56 (5.1%) | 29 (56%) | 4 (19%) | 137/1300 (11%) | NR | |
| 2 (5%) | 5 (2.5%) | 17 (12.3%) | 25 (2.3%) | 22 (42%) | 15 (71%) | 1150/1300 (88%) | 320/2634 (12.2%) | |
| NR | NR | NR | NR | 6 (11.5%) | 8 (38%) | 240/875 (27%) | NR | |
| 2 (5%) | 1 (0.5%) | 4 (2.9%) | 5 (0.5%) | 6 (11.5%) | NR | 5/498 (1%) | NR |
Abbreviations: ICU intensive care unit, IMV invasive mechanical ventilation, ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, NR not reported
aReported as NIV or HFNC use; bdefined as those admitted to ICU requiring mechanical ventilation or had FiO2 ≥ 0.6
Recommendations for providing respiratory care to COVID-19 patients
| Respiratory intervention | Evidence resource | Recommendation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Oxygen therapy | 5 in vitro [ 3 in vivo [ | • Use nasal cannula and place a surgical/procedure mask on the patient's face • Avoid Venturi mask • Avoid nonrebreather mask unless it is filtered |
| 2 | High-flow nasal cannula | 1 in vitro [ 2 in vivo [ | • Proper nasal cannula fitting • Place a surgical/procedure mask over HFNC on the patient's face (Fig. |
| 3 | Nebulization | 2 in vitro [ 2 in vivo [ | • Use metered dosed inhaler with spacer when possible • Avoid using small volume nebulizer unless it is filtered (Fig. • Use nebulizer in line with HFNC or via ventilator |
| 4 | Lung expansion and airway clearance therapy* | 3 in vivo [ | • If using IPPB, place a filter between circuit and mask or mouthpiece, or on expiratory port • If possible, avoid cough inducing therapies such as intermittent percussive ventilation and cough assist • During high-frequency chest wall oscillation therapy, place a surgical/procedure mask on the patient's face |
| 5 | Non-invasive ventilation* | 2 in vitro [ 2 in vivo [ | • Use tight fit oral mask without leaks, consider helmet or total face mask if available • Avoid using nasal mask • When using non-heated-wire single-limb circuit, place a filter between the non-vented mask and the expiratory port (Fig. • If humidification is required, heated wire single-limb circuit with filter placed at the expiratory port for non-invasive ventilator (Fig. |
| 6 | Intubation and Invasive ventilation* | 1 in vitro [ 4 in vivo [ | • During bag mask ventilation, place a filter between the mask and resuscitation bag (Fig. • Most experienced provider performs intubation • Use video-laryngoscope • Rapid sequence intubation • Avoid breaking the ventilator circuit |
| 7 | Ventilator weaning | • Avoid cool aerosol for tracheostomy patient, instead use HME. If the patient needs frequent suctioning (more than once every hour), place an in-line suction catheter with T-piece connected to cool aerosol or heated humidification, the other end of T-piece connected to a filter (Fig. • Avoid using T-piece trials. If needed, use the setup with a filter described above | |
| 8 | Extubation* | • When removing the endotracheal tube, simultaneously turn off the ventilator • Avoid disconnecting ETT from the ventilator circuit before extubation to reduce spray of contaminated aerosols | |
| 9 | Transport | • Place a filter between the artificial airway and the transport ventilator circuit • Use HME that has filter function (HME-F) • Consider clamping the ETT before disconnection from ventilator circuit | |
| 10 | Bronchoscopy assist* | 2 in vivo [ | • For spontaneously breathing patients, place a surgical mask on patient's face (Fig. • Use NIV mask with examination port for patients on NIV (Fig. • Use swivel adapter to insert bronchoscope for intubated patient (Fig. |
Abbreviations: HFNC high-flow nasal cannula, IPPB intermittent positive pressure breathing, HME heat moisture exchanger, ETT endotracheal tube, NIV non-invasive ventilation
*Based on CDC guidelines, these procedures should ideally be performed in airborne infection isolation rooms
Fig. 2Wearing a surgical mask over high-flow high humidity nasal cannula
Fig. 3a SVN setup with filter and one-way valve. b SVN setup with a filter
Fig. 4a Non-heated single limb ventilator circuit. b Heated single limb ventilator circuit
Fig. 5Resuscitation bag setup with a filter
Fig. 6T-piece setup for tracheostomy patients
Fig. 7a Bronchoscope insertion via the nose. b Bronchoscope insertion via the mouth. c Bronchoscope insertion via the endotracheal tube. d Bronchoscope insertion via the NIV mask
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the literature search