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ATLS | Airway
Description
π Acute Airway & Ventilation Review
1) π« Acute Airway Obstruction & Compromise
Patho: Fastest killer in trauma. Obstruction may be complete/partial/progressive. Common: tongue occluding hypopharynx with βLOC; also vomit, blood/secretions, teeth/FBs. βLOC β high aspiration risk β often needs definitive airway. RSI Meds:
- Etomidate 0.3 mg/kg β sedation w/ minimal BP/ICP effect; watch adrenal suppression & hypovolemia.
- Succinylcholine 1β2 mg/kg β rapid, brief paralysis; avoid in crush/burns/electrical/CKD/neuromuscular dz (βKβΊ). If fail intubation β BVM until recovery. Team Roles: π¨ββοΈ Leader/Airway β assess & choose route/timing; plan for difficult airway. π©ββοΈ RN β suction ready, draw RSI meds, SpOβ/ETCOβ monitoring, manual C-spine restriction. π« RT β ventilator setup, capnography confirmation. π§ Consultants (neurosurg) for head-injured timing. Key Signs (π¨): No response/abnormal speech, stridor/gurgle/snore, absent breath sounds, agitation (hypoxia), tachypnea, cyanosis (late). RN Actions: Stimulate for verbal response; jaw-thrust/chin-lift; suction + log-roll lateral if vomit (maintain C-spine); pre-oxygenate 100% before/after attempts; OPA/NPA as bridge; high-flow Oβ β₯10 L/min; continuous SpOβ + ETCOβ. Quick Hits:
- Priority #1 = airway & ventilation.
- Intubate if GCS β€8, seizures, cannot maintain patency/oxygenation.
- Maintain C-spine throughout.
- Drug-assisted intubation needs rescue plan (surgical airway).
- Confirm ETT: bilateral breath sounds + exhaled COβ β .
2) π£οΈ Traumatic Airway Injuries (Laryngeal/Neck/Maxillofacial)
Patho: Neck hematoma displaces airway; larynx/trachea disruption β bleeding into tree; facial fx + swelling/teeth/secretions obstruct; bilateral mandibular fx = loss of support (esp. supine). Med pearls: Avoid nasal tubes if cribriform/basilar skull fx suspected. Team: πͺ Surgeon β hemorrhage control & emergent airway (cric > trach in ED). πΌοΈ Imaging (CT) after airway secure. π©ββοΈ RN/Airway β anticipate rapid loss; gentle ETT under direct vision if laryngeal injury. Red Flags (π¨): Laryngeal triad = hoarseness + subQ emphysema + palpable fracture; expanding neck hematoma/stridor; basilar skull signs (raccoon eyes, Battleβs, CSF leak) β no nasotracheal; refusing supine (mandible issues). RN Actions: Watch for swelling/SC air; be ready for surgical airway; avoid nasal routes with facial/skull fx. Quick Hits: Cric preferred; LEMON for difficulty; OTI is first-line when feasible.
3) π¬οΈ Ventilatory Compromise
Patho: Ventilation failure from chest mechanics (rib fx/flail), CNS depression, or SCI.
- SCI: Above/below C3 β diaphragmatic-only breathing; rapid shallow β effective β atelectasis β failure.
- Chest trauma: Pain β splinting β shallow breaths β hypoxemia. Sedation/Analgesia: Helps tolerance of assisted ventilation, but excess can abolish tone β airway loss β οΈ. Team: π©ββοΈ RN/Airway β assess symmetry, listen for β/absent sounds; beware PPV converting simple β tension pneumo or causing barotrauma. π« RT β PPV, ETCOβ monitoring. π¨ββοΈ MD β ABGs; treat pain/CNS causes. Key Signs (π¨): Seesaw/abdominal breathing (SCI), asymmetrical rise (pneumo/flail), β/absent sounds, accessory muscle use. RN Actions: Check symmetric rise & bilateral air entry; 2-person BVM if needed; if poor sounds β alert for pneumo; continuous ETCOβ for ventilation; protect head-injured from hypercarbia.