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The Ultimate Induction
The Ultimate Introduction
Outline
• Essentials of Critical Care airway management
in the age of information overload
• Two memorable 2013 airway cases
– Tricky Trauma
– Mediastinal Mega Mass

• Techniques for your induction tool box
Personal Perspective
• 12 Years covering Anaesthesia & ICU in FNQ
– Trauma
– Sepsis
– Obstetrics
– Paediatrics
– Tropical Medicine
– Occasional retrieval

• Tertiary referral 400km away
Personal Perspective
• Senior role in College of Anaesthetists
– Assess overseas trained Specialists

– Inspect hospitals for training accreditation
– Give expert opinion to Coroner in cases of
anaesthetic misadventure
Personal Perspective
• Training future airway managers
–
–
–
–

ANZCA
ACEM
CICM
ACCRM

• Upskilling
– Rural Generalists
– Paramedics
– Residents
Personal Perspective
• Anaesthesia Outreach to Cape York
– Weipa, TI, Cooktown
– Dental & ENT
– Large Paediatric Case Load

• Overseas Aid Work with Interplast
–
–
–
–

PNG, Sri Lanka, Fiji
Cleft Lip & Palate
Head and Neck
Mostly Paediatric
BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction
The Ultimate Induction
• Two rules
– air goes in and out
– blood goes round and round

• Many different recipes
– Pick your own
– As long as the cake rises………………..

• Expertise comes down to time at the wheel
Downhill Experts
Induction in Critical Care
• A different contract with the patient than
inducing anaesthesia
1.
2.
3.
4.

Keep the alive
Keep them comfortable
Prevent recall
Make them unconscious

• Awareness of induction is not the worst
possible outcome
Induction in Critical Care
• Data (e.g. NAP4)
highlights difference
between OT and ICU/ED
• Often no bail out option
• Many things are done
by experts are intuitive
• Induction is a complex
process, need to fly at
high altitude
Cautionary tales from 2013
Tricky Trauma
Patrick
• Executive Director of Medical Services is riding
to work on his Motorbike
• Hit at 0745 5 km from CBH
• Brought in to ED
– # Pelvis
– # Ribs
– Pain ++
Patrick
• To OT for urgent pelvic Ex Fix
• Arrives in induction bay
• And said……………………
What I should be feeling
What I really felt
What are our options?
• RSI and look?
• Video Laryngoscope?
• Awake FOI?

• Avoid GA?
Meanwhile
Discussed plan with Patrick
• Decided FOI was not reasonable
– Pain, Opioids, Moderate Hypoxia
– Unable to sit up

• Plan
A.
B.
C.
D.

Modified RSI +/- bougie
Videolaryngoscopy
Blind bougie +/- proseal (if still not in trachea)
Prearranged second consultant backup
Plan A……….
• Normal modified RSI
• Attempted laryngoscopy
– Proper Grade 4
– Narrow crowded teeth
– Early use of bougie – unable to find trachea
– Abandoned while sats still OK
– Bag & mask
– Pulse Ox lag ++++
Plan B…………….
• Attempt with Videolaryngoscope
– Unable to get into mouth
– Pulled apart – no joy
– Bailed 2nd time
– Able to bag/mask
– Called for assistance
Plan ??????????
• Second Anaesthestist inserted Proseal
• Attempted to use FO scope down Proseal to
guide bougie – unsuccessful
• Things are starting to look ugly
BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction
15 Years of Anaesthetic Adventures
• Airway not ideal……………
• Air going in and out
• Relatively short case

• Decided to accept the supraglottic airway
Elaine Bromiley
A failure of airway management
• Anxious in my first week back as a consultant
• Unfamiliar with the VDL
• The second consultant was not involved in the
airway management planning
• I bailed on my own plan – never got to C
Lessons Learnt
• It is better to be lucky than good!
• Accepting a less than perfect airway is sometimes
appropriate
– Air goes in and out
– Repeated goes at the larynx is not wise
– FOI can be tricky in trauma

• Maintaining situational awareness and dynamic
decision making ability
Dynamic Decision Making

Input

Feedback for Evaluation

Decision

Analysis

Action

Influences
Objectives
Preconceptions
Workload

Skill
Training
Experience

Regulations
Rules
S.O.P.S

Captain Julian Hipwell, Cathay Pacific Airlines
Checklists
Information Overload
M.A.I.D.E.
For Every Induction
• Monitoring
• Assistance

• Intravenous access
• Drugs

• Equipment
Monitoring
• Check it is connected
and reading
• NIBP Cycle time
• Arterial line?
• ETCO2
Assistance
• Need skilled help
• Two questions to assess
level of experience
– Cricoid pressure?
– Pass the bougie?

• Critical Care Induction
will often require
another doctor
– Delineate roles
Intravenous Access
• Often overlooked in a
crisis
• In non-haemorragic
induction, don’t need
huge bore
• Must run freely
• Low threshold for
replacing
Drugs
• What you will use plus
emergency drugs
• Endless debate about best
induction recipe
• Ketamine/Rocuronium seems
reasonable in shock
• Use what you know best
• Don’t skimp on paralysis
Equipment
• Airways – 3 options
– Through Cords (ETT)
– Over Cords (LMA)
– Under Cords (Crico)

• Laryngoscopes
– Classic
– Video
– Fibreoptic

• Positive Pressure
– Bag/Mask
– O2 outlet

• Negative Pressure
– Sucker under head

• Adjuncts
– Guedel
– Bougie
Sounds Sweet?
Mega Mediastinal Mass
Mega Mediastinal Mass
• 39 year old lady from TI admitted to ICU on
the 16th of April with stridor
• Seen in Feb by the respiratory team for
investigation of a mediastinal mass
• FNA done, awaiting result
Mega Mediastinal Mass
• Deteriorated over the last few days, presented
to TI hospital acutely distressed
• Flown to CBH ED, survived a CT chest
• Admitted to ICU overnight
BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction
BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction
CT Report
• “A large mass extends from the anterior
mediastinum into the middle
mediastinum, and superiorly towards the
left, partially compressing the left pulmonary
artery. There is severe compression of the
trachea from the carina to the thoracic
inlet, with a minimum diameter of 3.6mm”
ICU Ward Round
• Seen by team at 8am Monday morning
• Awake, maintaining airway sitting up, unable
to lie flat
• Appeared likely to obstruct at some time
during the day
Plan?
• Thoughts……………………
• Options………………………..
• The only thing going through my head was…..
BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction
We consulted Townsville
• Definitive diagnosis via mediastinal biopsy
• Possible Cardiothoracic resection
• Probable Radiotherapy

• Advised us to secure her airway for transfer….
Mission Impossible?
What are the options?
• Standard Induction – “Sux and see?”
• Awake FOI – Smallest bronchoscope is 4mm
• Gas induction?

• Retrieval with ECMO/CPB?
Group Mined
• Collaborative decision making
• Robust discussion with trust

• Anaesthesia, Intensive Care, ENT and General
Surgery
• We came to a consensus…………..
This is a crisis, a large crisis
In fact, if you got a
moment, it's a twelve-storey
crisis with a magnificent
entrance hall, carpeting
throughout, 24-hour
portage, and an enormous sign
on the roof, saying 'This Is a
Large Crisis'.
A large crisis requires a large
plan. Get me two pencils and a
pair of underpants.
“Two pencils and a pair of undies”
M.A.I.D.E.
For Every Induction
• Monitoring
• Assistance

• Intravenous access
• Drugs

• Equipment
First use of ‘Staged Intubation’
• Airway too narrow for anything other than a
wire
• Big team involved, clear communication of
plan
• Principle was to keep patient awake and in
control of her own airway for as long as
possible
Precarious Position
• Three senior anaesthetists + two techs
– FO Scope
– Staged Extubation Kit
– Drugs and Monitoring

• Theatre cleared of all unnecessary personnel
• ENT surgeons scrubbed and standing by
Steady, steady
• Regulation topicalization and fibreoptic
visualisation of cords
• Through cords and guidewire fed down
bronchoscopic biopsy channel
• Position confirmed with Image Intensifier
Point of no return
• IV Induction
• Bougie fed over guidewire

• Size 6 Microlaryngoscopy ETT railroaded over
bougie into right main bronchus
• Confirmed with subsequent brochoscopy
Transferred to Townsville
• Poorly differentiated tumour
• Extubated after 22 days post radiotherapy
• First time it has been done (we think),
submitted for publication
• Rejected!
Additions to your toolkit
Anaesthetists Trade Secrets
• New Zealand Crisis Algorithm
– Assume nothing
– Trust no-one
– Give oxygen

• We always ventilate in RSI

• Cricoid pressure tells everyone the airway is
important, but doesn’t really help the patient
Anaesthetists Trade Secrets
• Dealing with a beard
Anaesthetists Trade Secrets
• Optimal Positioning
– ‘Sniffing the morning air’
– ‘Drinking a pint of lager’

• Need flexion of cervical
spine
• Only use for Voluven
Proseal-Bougie Technique
• http://b.vimeocdn.com/ts/429/815/42981573
9_1280.jpg

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BCC4: Sean McManus on The Ultimate Induction

  • 3. Outline • Essentials of Critical Care airway management in the age of information overload • Two memorable 2013 airway cases – Tricky Trauma – Mediastinal Mega Mass • Techniques for your induction tool box
  • 4. Personal Perspective • 12 Years covering Anaesthesia & ICU in FNQ – Trauma – Sepsis – Obstetrics – Paediatrics – Tropical Medicine – Occasional retrieval • Tertiary referral 400km away
  • 5. Personal Perspective • Senior role in College of Anaesthetists – Assess overseas trained Specialists – Inspect hospitals for training accreditation – Give expert opinion to Coroner in cases of anaesthetic misadventure
  • 6. Personal Perspective • Training future airway managers – – – – ANZCA ACEM CICM ACCRM • Upskilling – Rural Generalists – Paramedics – Residents
  • 7. Personal Perspective • Anaesthesia Outreach to Cape York – Weipa, TI, Cooktown – Dental & ENT – Large Paediatric Case Load • Overseas Aid Work with Interplast – – – – PNG, Sri Lanka, Fiji Cleft Lip & Palate Head and Neck Mostly Paediatric
  • 9. The Ultimate Induction • Two rules – air goes in and out – blood goes round and round • Many different recipes – Pick your own – As long as the cake rises……………….. • Expertise comes down to time at the wheel
  • 11. Induction in Critical Care • A different contract with the patient than inducing anaesthesia 1. 2. 3. 4. Keep the alive Keep them comfortable Prevent recall Make them unconscious • Awareness of induction is not the worst possible outcome
  • 12. Induction in Critical Care • Data (e.g. NAP4) highlights difference between OT and ICU/ED • Often no bail out option • Many things are done by experts are intuitive • Induction is a complex process, need to fly at high altitude
  • 15. Patrick • Executive Director of Medical Services is riding to work on his Motorbike • Hit at 0745 5 km from CBH • Brought in to ED – # Pelvis – # Ribs – Pain ++
  • 16. Patrick • To OT for urgent pelvic Ex Fix • Arrives in induction bay • And said……………………
  • 17. What I should be feeling
  • 19. What are our options? • RSI and look? • Video Laryngoscope? • Awake FOI? • Avoid GA?
  • 21. Discussed plan with Patrick • Decided FOI was not reasonable – Pain, Opioids, Moderate Hypoxia – Unable to sit up • Plan A. B. C. D. Modified RSI +/- bougie Videolaryngoscopy Blind bougie +/- proseal (if still not in trachea) Prearranged second consultant backup
  • 22. Plan A………. • Normal modified RSI • Attempted laryngoscopy – Proper Grade 4 – Narrow crowded teeth – Early use of bougie – unable to find trachea – Abandoned while sats still OK – Bag & mask – Pulse Ox lag ++++
  • 23. Plan B……………. • Attempt with Videolaryngoscope – Unable to get into mouth – Pulled apart – no joy – Bailed 2nd time – Able to bag/mask – Called for assistance
  • 24. Plan ?????????? • Second Anaesthestist inserted Proseal • Attempted to use FO scope down Proseal to guide bougie – unsuccessful • Things are starting to look ugly
  • 26. 15 Years of Anaesthetic Adventures • Airway not ideal…………… • Air going in and out • Relatively short case • Decided to accept the supraglottic airway
  • 28. A failure of airway management • Anxious in my first week back as a consultant • Unfamiliar with the VDL • The second consultant was not involved in the airway management planning • I bailed on my own plan – never got to C
  • 29. Lessons Learnt • It is better to be lucky than good! • Accepting a less than perfect airway is sometimes appropriate – Air goes in and out – Repeated goes at the larynx is not wise – FOI can be tricky in trauma • Maintaining situational awareness and dynamic decision making ability
  • 30. Dynamic Decision Making Input Feedback for Evaluation Decision Analysis Action Influences Objectives Preconceptions Workload Skill Training Experience Regulations Rules S.O.P.S Captain Julian Hipwell, Cathay Pacific Airlines
  • 33. M.A.I.D.E. For Every Induction • Monitoring • Assistance • Intravenous access • Drugs • Equipment
  • 34. Monitoring • Check it is connected and reading • NIBP Cycle time • Arterial line? • ETCO2
  • 35. Assistance • Need skilled help • Two questions to assess level of experience – Cricoid pressure? – Pass the bougie? • Critical Care Induction will often require another doctor – Delineate roles
  • 36. Intravenous Access • Often overlooked in a crisis • In non-haemorragic induction, don’t need huge bore • Must run freely • Low threshold for replacing
  • 37. Drugs • What you will use plus emergency drugs • Endless debate about best induction recipe • Ketamine/Rocuronium seems reasonable in shock • Use what you know best • Don’t skimp on paralysis
  • 38. Equipment • Airways – 3 options – Through Cords (ETT) – Over Cords (LMA) – Under Cords (Crico) • Laryngoscopes – Classic – Video – Fibreoptic • Positive Pressure – Bag/Mask – O2 outlet • Negative Pressure – Sucker under head • Adjuncts – Guedel – Bougie
  • 41. Mega Mediastinal Mass • 39 year old lady from TI admitted to ICU on the 16th of April with stridor • Seen in Feb by the respiratory team for investigation of a mediastinal mass • FNA done, awaiting result
  • 42. Mega Mediastinal Mass • Deteriorated over the last few days, presented to TI hospital acutely distressed • Flown to CBH ED, survived a CT chest • Admitted to ICU overnight
  • 45. CT Report • “A large mass extends from the anterior mediastinum into the middle mediastinum, and superiorly towards the left, partially compressing the left pulmonary artery. There is severe compression of the trachea from the carina to the thoracic inlet, with a minimum diameter of 3.6mm”
  • 46. ICU Ward Round • Seen by team at 8am Monday morning • Awake, maintaining airway sitting up, unable to lie flat • Appeared likely to obstruct at some time during the day
  • 49. We consulted Townsville • Definitive diagnosis via mediastinal biopsy • Possible Cardiothoracic resection • Probable Radiotherapy • Advised us to secure her airway for transfer….
  • 51. What are the options? • Standard Induction – “Sux and see?” • Awake FOI – Smallest bronchoscope is 4mm • Gas induction? • Retrieval with ECMO/CPB?
  • 52. Group Mined • Collaborative decision making • Robust discussion with trust • Anaesthesia, Intensive Care, ENT and General Surgery • We came to a consensus…………..
  • 53. This is a crisis, a large crisis In fact, if you got a moment, it's a twelve-storey crisis with a magnificent entrance hall, carpeting throughout, 24-hour portage, and an enormous sign on the roof, saying 'This Is a Large Crisis'. A large crisis requires a large plan. Get me two pencils and a pair of underpants.
  • 54. “Two pencils and a pair of undies”
  • 55. M.A.I.D.E. For Every Induction • Monitoring • Assistance • Intravenous access • Drugs • Equipment
  • 56. First use of ‘Staged Intubation’ • Airway too narrow for anything other than a wire • Big team involved, clear communication of plan • Principle was to keep patient awake and in control of her own airway for as long as possible
  • 57. Precarious Position • Three senior anaesthetists + two techs – FO Scope – Staged Extubation Kit – Drugs and Monitoring • Theatre cleared of all unnecessary personnel • ENT surgeons scrubbed and standing by
  • 58. Steady, steady • Regulation topicalization and fibreoptic visualisation of cords • Through cords and guidewire fed down bronchoscopic biopsy channel • Position confirmed with Image Intensifier
  • 59. Point of no return • IV Induction • Bougie fed over guidewire • Size 6 Microlaryngoscopy ETT railroaded over bougie into right main bronchus • Confirmed with subsequent brochoscopy
  • 60. Transferred to Townsville • Poorly differentiated tumour • Extubated after 22 days post radiotherapy • First time it has been done (we think), submitted for publication • Rejected!
  • 61. Additions to your toolkit
  • 62. Anaesthetists Trade Secrets • New Zealand Crisis Algorithm – Assume nothing – Trust no-one – Give oxygen • We always ventilate in RSI • Cricoid pressure tells everyone the airway is important, but doesn’t really help the patient
  • 63. Anaesthetists Trade Secrets • Dealing with a beard
  • 64. Anaesthetists Trade Secrets • Optimal Positioning – ‘Sniffing the morning air’ – ‘Drinking a pint of lager’ • Need flexion of cervical spine • Only use for Voluven