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Anaesthesia in Prehospital Emergencies and in the Emergency Room

Overview
Journal Resuscitation
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2009 Nov 28
PMID 19942337
Citations 26
Authors
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Abstract

Aims: To review anaesthesia in prehospital emergencies and in the emergency room, and to discuss guidelines for anaesthesia indication; pre-oxygenation; anaesthesia induction and drugs; airway management; anaesthesia maintenance and monitoring; side effects and training.

Methods: A literature search in the PubMed database was performed and 87 articles were included in this non-systematic review.

Conclusions: For pre-oxygenation, high-flow oxygen should be delivered with a tight-fitting face-mask provided with a reservoir. In haemodynamically unstable patients, ketamine may be the induction agent of choice. The rocuronium antagonist sugammadex may have the potential to make rocuronium a first-line neuromuscular blocking agent in emergency induction. An experienced health-care provider may consider prehospital anaesthesia induction. A moderately experienced health-care provider should optimise oxygenation, fasten hospital transfer and only try to intubate a patient in extremis. If intubation fails twice, ventilation should be resumed with an alternative supra-glottic airway or a bag-valve-mask device. A lesser experienced health-care provider should completely refrain from intubation, optimise oxygenation, fasten hospital transfer and only in extremis ventilate with an alternative supra-glottic airway or a bag-valve-mask device. With an expected difficult airway, the patient should be intubated awake. With an unexpected difficult airway, bag-valve-mask ventilation should be resumed and an alternative supra-glottic airway device inserted. Senior help should be called early. In a "can-not-ventilate, can-not-intubate" situation an alternative airway should be tried and if unsuccessful because of severe upper airway pathology, a surgical airway should be performed. Ventilation should be monitored continuously with capnography. Clinical training is important to increase airway management skills.

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Management of critically ill patients in austere environments: good clinical practice by the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (SIAARTI).

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Prehospital emergency anesthesia: A single-center retrospective analysis of guideline adherence and unexpected incidents.

Beierle S, Beierle A, Rossaint R, Beckers S, Schroder H, Felzen M PLoS One. 2024; 19(9):e0310146.

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[Prehospital emergency anesthesia in adults : Current recommendations for performing prehospital emergency anesthesia based on the recommendations for prehospital emergency anesthesia in adults].

Breitkopf M, Wihler C, Walther A Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed. 2023; 118(5):396-406.

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Competences in the training of nurses to assist the airway of adult patients in urgency and emergency situations.

Miranda F, Pereira-Junior G, Mazzo A Rev Lat Am Enfermagem. 2021; 29:e3434.

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