Podcast 553: Airway Management in the Hypoxic COVID-19 Patient (Recorded 4/3/20)

Podcast 553: Airway Management in the Hypoxic COVID-19 Patient (Recorded 4/3/20)

Contributor: Dylan Luyten, MD

Educational pearls:

  • Clinical management of COVID-19 is rapidly evolving, relying on case reports and clinical experience
  • In just a month, the consensus around management of COVID patients with severe hypoxia has shifted from an early intubation strategy to other, non-invasive means
  • Intubating early can quickly consume ventilator resources, require increased intensive care monitoring, and likely leads to longer hospital stays and once COVID patients are intubated, extubation can take days to weeks.
  • In Italy, ventilator supplies were depleted leading to the use of helmet CPAP machines, which appeared to be effective in management of respiratory distress in COVID, though not available for use in the US
  • Non-invasive ventilation such as CPAP/BiPAP is thought to increase risk to staff for infection via aerosolization, and has often been avoided in COVID patients
  • High flow nasal cannulas appear to pose less of a risk of aerosolization of viral particles (especially when a surgical mask is placed over the patient's nose, mouth and apparatus)
  • Anecdotal evidence from NYC has shown success allowing conscious patients to maintain hypoxia on HFN, where they will self prone to help with lung recruitment, and seemingly do well despite persistent saturations in the 80s or less
  • Hospitals around the country are moving away from the intubate early methodology in favor of high flow oxygen therapy as long as they are not having issues with work of breathing or other complications
  • The pathophysiology of respiratory distress and hypoxia in COVID patients is evolving as well, and some presentations appear similar to disease processes such as high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) rather than acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), in that patients are quite well appearing despite phenomenally low oximetry readings.
    • These select patients appear to be excellent candidates for non-invasive means rather than an early intubation strategy

Editor's note: do not take lightly that intubation is one of the highest risk aerosolization generating procedures, along with many peri-intubation procedures like suctioning, BVM, etc.

References

[1]. Sorbello, M. et al. The Italian coronavirus disease 2019 outbreak: recommendations from clinical practice. Anaesthesia. 2020 Mar 27.

[2]. Giwa, AL. Desai A. Duca A. Novel 2019 coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19): An updated overview for emergency clinicians. Emerg Med Pract. 2020 May 1;22(5):1-28.

[3]. Ather B, Edemekong PF. Airborne Precautions. [Updated 2020 Feb 17]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2020 Jan.

Summarized by Jackson Roos, MS3 | Edited by Erik Verzemnieks, MD

Photo Credit: New England Journal of Medicine

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2007589?query=RP

Episoder(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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 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 Sep 20183min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
rekommandert
tingenes-tilstand
jss
rss-rekommandert
liberal-halvtime
rss-paradigmepodden
sinnsyn
forskningno
villmarksliv
pod-britannia
fjellsportpodden
dekodet-2
rss-lundqvist-podden
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
hva-er-greia-med
tidlose-historier
rss-overskuddsliv
diagnose
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid