Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Cutting the Neck- A final word!

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

The one area of greatest concern, amongst delegates when I’m giving an airway workshop, is when and how, to do a surgical airway. Why do we fear this so much?

It’s very simple. There are three main reasons:

1. We keep asking ourselves, “When should I really do the surgical airway?” So we aren’t sure of the indications.

2. We keep asking ourselves, “What if I screw it up?”

3. We don’t do this procedure often, in fact very rarely, so we are not as skilled as we would like to be.

Let me go over some of the main points associated with surgical airway, that will clarify all of these issues.

The surgical airway is a last avenue, it is usually the final pathway in the management of the emergency airway.

The indication for the surgical airway is simply cannot ventilate and cannot oxygenate. It is not cannot intubate.

Although our initial aim is to secure the airway, by putting a cuff in the trachea and inflating it, our plans must change, once we cannot obtain access to the trachea, via the cords.

You say, but I can’t intubate and I don’t have a secure airway. I must do the surgical airway.

No!

Stop for a moment and think. The third reason that we are so afraid of the surgical airway is that we don’t do many. This in itself presents issues when you are trying to do it. You need to be exceptionally confident with your landmarks for finding the cricothyroid membrane. That’s why I spend so much time talking about this at the workshops, because at that time this is the only learning you may have. That’s why I use ‘pig’s tracheas’, so you get used to knowing what it feels like to touch real tissues.

This is a life saving procedure to be used when there are no alternatives, however, the consequences from it being done incorrectly can be significant and incude lacerated tracheas, penetration of the oesophagus and more.

So I say, can you really not intubate? Have you tried the tube with an introducer and have you tried a bougie, have you tried changing the position of the patient, or a new blade, or even a new operator? OK.

Now can you really not ventilate and oxygenate?

Have you tried a jaw thrust and an oropharyngeal airway?

You have? How about a laryngeal mask? But it doesn’t secure the airway you say. True, but with controlled bagging ie., pressing on the bag over a period of 1-2 seconds, rather than blowing an aggressive blast of oxygen in, and the use of cricoid, you may be able to ventilate and oxygenate the patient until assistance arrives.

I’m not saying wake the patient, Unless you are performing a semi-elective procedure, in most cases in the emergency department, that’s impossible, I’m saying ventilate and oxygenate until someone with more experience or a ‘gadget’ of some sort comes along.

I honestly believe that we don’t use enough laryngeal masks in the ED. I know all about, “But they don’t protect the airway”, but this is a choice between cutting the neck, which you may never have done before and will probably never do again, after this episode and ventilating and oxygenating until some other avenue is found.

Think about this, it may save you a lot of stress.

So to summarise:

The indication for surgical airway is cannot ventilate and cannot oxygenate. It isn’t cannot intubate. Have you tried everything to open the airway? Have you tried an oropharyngeal airway? Have you tried a laryngeal mask? Have you tried relaxing the pressure on the cricoid a little, as this in itself can collapse the airway?

Once you have done these things and realise that you can oxygenate and ventilate, you can try intubating again, with the confidence that comes from knowing that if you cannot pass the tube, you can still keep the patient alive. Keep the surgical airway for those patient where you have tried everything but cannot push any oxygen in.

Peter Kas

My Rant on what we need to know in Emergency Medicine.

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Watch the video.

This is the reason the RESUSCITATION CONFERENCE, RESUS 2010 was established in Australia(July 10th and 11th). This is my rant during a Fellowship Course.
It really is about what we need to know in emergency medicine. It’s about knowing what our role is in Emergency Medicine. It’s about knowing that we cannot know everything about every  other specialty, but there are some things such as RESUSCITATION that we have to be experts on.
We as Emergency Physicians have to work with other specialties, in the best interests of the patient. We cannot know, or should not expect ourselves, or be expected by others, to know as much as other subspecialties. We are not cardiologists, or upper GI specialists, we are Emergency Specialists. We need an amount of knowledge that allows us to intially stabilize and diagnose and treat patients, then admit or discharge appropriately.
WE ARE RESUSCITATION experts, or should be. Remember, if you are a registrar, don’t have, as I have seen in other registrars and even emergency physicians, some kind of inferiority complex, because you do not know things in depth. Don’t be bullied into feeling that way by other subspecialties. Compassionate and understanding specialists in other specialties understand and respect what we do. The ones that don’t, don’t waste your time with, or re-educate. Do what is in the best interests of your patient.
We should be proud of our specialty, because we make a difference. We are the only place that some of these patients can go. Be knowledgeable so you make a difference, because as I always say “the knowledge you take into a shift does matter!”

Our New Podcasts on itunes

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

imagesNow you can get our free podcasts. Just click here and subscribe through itunes. Its FREE!

Resus Talk

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
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Resus Talk‘ is the new offering we have for you. It replaces Medical Talk and gives a whole lot more! Current holders of Medical Talk subscriptions will now receive Resus Talk and all the new benefits. You have told us what you want; more speakers, more topics, resuscitation, cardiac arrest, paediatrics, emergency education, airway, general medical, surgical topics, more, more more!. We now deliver and more! Membership, someone said, has it’s privileges. Here they are. Resus Talk membership also gives you special offers such as huge savings on some workshops and more. Enjoy the learning!

The Advanced Airway Workshop

Friday, February 20th, 2009
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The Advanced Airway Workshop.

We just finished the ‘Airway’ workshop in Melbourne at the Soma Health Sim Centre and what an outstanding time we all had. The guys played all out and everyone tried new things. We had a range of manikins, 10 all up, from the simplest to the most difficult intubations. Everyone had a go. We bagged, used basic techniques, through to bougie, laryngeal masks, intubating laryngeal masks, intubation, surgical airway, as well as gadgets such as the ‘Airtraq’.

I thank everyone for participating and for making it such a great day!testimonials-for-airway-workshop-melb-feb-2009