On the Streets #9: Advanced Applications of Capnography

On the Streets #9: Advanced Applications of Capnography

Capnography is the measurement of the partial pressure of exhaled CO2 and is an indirect measurement of your cellular respiration. It is displayed visually as a block-like waveform during the exhalation phase of respiration and monitors ventilation in real-time. Capnography is the gold standard for monitoring sedated and intubated patients in the hospital and the field and can be used in many other situations to discern more information about your patient.

Our host Jordan Ourada is joined by Dr. Eric Hill who is a board certified Emergency Physician, EMS Director for 9 agencies around Colorado, a retired military physician with the Army, former paramedic firefighter and combat veteran to discuss advanced applications of capnography to monitor a range of different patients in the pre-hospital setting. Tune in to learn how to apply capnography to monitor your patients and detect serious conditions like sepsis and DKA and initiate time-sensitive interventions that reduce mortality in patients.

Quick Educational Pearls:

  1. Normal range is between 35 - 45 mmHg
  2. Low capnography indicates they are blowing off CO2
  3. High capnography indicates they are retaining CO2
  4. Normal waveform morphology is box-like with gradual expiratory plateau after expiratory upstroke
  5. Monitor your patient's status and interpret the capnography numbers, rate and waveforms accordingly

Time Stamps

1:32 Capnography definition

6:36 Normal range

7:40 Reading capnography waveforms

12:36 Capnography monitoring in sedated/intubated patients

13:36 Intubation monitoring

18:03 VQ match vs mismatch

21:42 Asthmatic patients

24:30 Capnography cannula

26:24 Cardiac arrest uses

31:28 Acid-base physiology

37:28 Diabetic patients

40:15 COPD patients

41:42 CHF patients

45:18 Head injury patients

52:07 Sepsis detection and subsequent prehospital management

1:08:15 Closing thoughts on using capnography in the field

REFERENCES

  • Brandt, P. "Current Capnography Field Uses." JEMS. 2010, Nov.

  • DiCorpo,P.,etal."CapnographyProvidesBiggerPhysiological

    Picture to Maximize Patient Care." JEMS. 2015, Nov.

  • Eckstein,M.,etal."End-tidalCO2asapredictorofsurvivalinout-of- hospital cardiac arrest." Prehosp Disaster Med. 2011 Jun;26(3):148-50

  • Kodali,B."Physicsofcapnography."2014

  • Poste,J.,etal."Airmedicaltransportofseverelyhead-injured patients undergoing paramedic rapid sequence intubation." Air Med J. 2004 Jul-Aug;23(4):36-40

  • Davis, D., et al. "Predictors of Intubation Success and Therapeutic Value of Paramedic Airway Management in a Large, Urban EMS System." Prehospital Emergency Care. 2006: Vol. 10, Iss. 3.

  • Grmec, S. "Comparison of three different methods to confirm endotracheal tube placement in emergency intubation." Intensive Care Medicine. 2002; 28: 701-4.

  • Silvestri, et al. "The Effectiveness of out of hospital use of continuous end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring on the rate of unrecognized misplaced intubation within a regional emergency medical services system." Ann Emerg Med. 2005; 45: 497- 503.

  • Hartman, et al. "Systematic Review and Meta- Analysis of End-Tidal Carbon Dioxide Values Associated With Return of Spontaneous Circulation During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation." Journal Intensive Care Med. 2015, Oct;30 (7) 426-35.

  • Levine, et al. "End-tidal carbon dioxide and outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest." N England J Med. 1997, Jul 31; 337(5): 301-6.

  • AHA 2015 Guidelines Update for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations

  • Hunter CL, et al. "A prehospital screening tool utilizing end-tidal carbon dioxide predicts sepsis and severe sepsis." American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2016 May; 34(5):813-819.

  • Bou Chebi, R, et al. "Diagnostic value of end tidal capnography in patients with hyperglycemia in the emergency department." BMC Emerg Med. 2016 Jan 29; 16:7

  • Soleimanpour, H, et al. "Predictive value of capnography for suspected diabetic ketoacidosis in the emergency department." West J Emerg Med. 2013;14(6): 590-4.

The Emergency Medical Minute is excited to announce that we are now offering AMA PRA Category 1 credits™ via online course modules. To access these and for more information, visit our website at www.emergencymedicalminute.com/cme-courses/ and create an account.

Jaksot(1147)

Podcast #384: Don't stab a PTA?

Podcast #384: Don't stab a PTA?

Author: Don Stader, MD Educational Pearls: Recent study suggests we may not need to drain uncomplicated peritonsillar abscesses Patients who received medical therapy alone had no difference in c...

26 Syys 20183min

Podcast #383: Prehospital Tubes

Podcast #383: Prehospital Tubes

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Two high quality randomized control trials published in 2018 demonstrated no difference in mortality or neurologic outcomes when using a supraglottic ai...

24 Syys 20184min

Podcast #382: Shoulder Separations

Podcast #382: Shoulder Separations

Author: Ryan Circh, MD Educational Pearls: A "shoulder separation" is when the clavicle separates from the scapula - also referred to as an acromio-clavicular (AC) separation Diagnosis is clinic...

21 Syys 20183min

Podcast #381: MRI... Burns?

Podcast #381: MRI... Burns?

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: MRI machines can generate enough heat from the radiofrequency to cause thermal burns Patients with EKG stickers, medication patches, clothing impregna...

19 Syys 20183min

Podcast #380: Oxygen for the kill

Podcast #380: Oxygen for the kill

Author: Ryan Circh, MD Educational Pearls: Review of 25 randomized control trials encompassing 16,037 acutely ill hospitalized patients Patients given oxygen with saturations > 94% on room air wer...

17 Syys 20183min

Podcast #379: Patient Perspectives of the Flu

Podcast #379: Patient Perspectives of the Flu

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Patients may have certain fears or expectations about the flu based on hearsay and other less reliable sources Taking extra time explaining the risks ...

14 Syys 20184min

Podcast #378: Is That a Brown Recluse Spider Bite?

Podcast #378: Is That a Brown Recluse Spider Bite?

Author: Michael Hunt, MD Educational Pearls: Use the mnemonic NOT RECLUSE to rule out a brown recluse spider bite: Numerous bites (recluse spiders will bite once) Occurence (recluse bites betw...

12 Syys 20184min

Podcast #377: Endocarditis

Podcast #377: Endocarditis

Author: Nick Tsipis, MD Educational Pearls: Persistent fever or positive blood cultures should raise suspicion for endocarditis Patients with recent dental procedures, recent cardiac surgeries a...

10 Syys 20183min

Suosittua kategoriassa Tiede

rss-poliisin-mieli
rss-mita-tulisi-tietaa
tiedekulma-podcast
rss-luontopodi-samuel-glassar-tutkii-luonnon-ihmeita
utelias-mieli
docemilia
rss-duodecim-lehti
radio-antro
filocast-filosofian-perusteet
rss-lihavuudesta-podcast
rss-sosiopodi