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David Lockey Department of Accident and Emergency, Royal London
Hospital, London E1 1BB
Correspondence to: D Lockey djl99{at}hotmail.com
In the United Kingdom, it is current practice for
paramedics to perform tracheal intubation on trauma patients when the
airway is compromised and basic airway manoeuvres have failed.
Paramedics in Britain never use anaesthetic drugs or muscle relaxants
to achieve intubation.
Anecdotal experience shows that patients who can be intubated without
the use of drugs have a poor prognosis. We investigated mortality in a
population of trauma patients who were intubated before reaching
hospital without anaesthetic drugs being used.
We looked retrospectively at the database of a helicopter
emergency medical service staffed by doctors and paramedics that is
specifically targeted at trauma patients in a mainly urban area. We
identified patients who had been intubated without drugs by paramedics
or doctors, and we recorded whether they survived to hospital
discharge. All patients were attended by physicians, but many of the
patients were intubated by ground crew paramedics before the medical
team arrived. Patients were taken to the nearest appropriate hospital
by ground or air.
In a six year period, from January 1990 to December 1996, 1623 patients
were intubated outside hospital. Of these, we excluded 143 (8.8%)
because they were not trauma patients. Of the remaining 1480 patients,
492 (33.2%) were intubated without drugs: 275 (55.8%) by physicians
and 216 (43.9%) by paramedics. Data regarding survival were not
available for six of these patients, but of the remaining 486 patients,
one (0.2%) survived. This person had a cardiac arrest after
penetrating chest trauma and underwent a thoracotomy on scene to
relieve pericardial tamponade and suture the myocardium.
As almost all the trauma patients intubated without the
use of drugs died, the value of this practice is doubtful. To allow easy passage of a tracheal tube without anaesthetic drugs, a patient must be profoundly unconscious, and a high likelihood of death might be
expected. Despite this expectation, it was surprising that the outcome
was almost always fatal.
Paramedics in Britain have been intubating without the use of
anaesthetic drugs for more than 20 years, and many resources have been
invested in teaching the skill. This intervention was introduced mainly
to improve outcome following medical (non-traumatic) cardiac
arrest, but recently the effectiveness of intubation in this
situation has been questioned.1 In patients with
severe trauma, airway compromise is a cause of prehospital death that can be prevented2 and simple airway manoeuvres can clear
the airway to provide vital oxygenation.
Laryngoscopy and attempted intubation without drugs have potential
risks, such as an increase in intracranial pressure, vomiting, and
unrecognised oesophageal intubation.3 Some trauma systems use drugs to facilitate prehospital intubation There is little evidence about the optimum prehospital management of
severe blunt injury, and there are no controlled trials of the
different methods of airway management. As the role of the UK paramedic
is under discussion5 and there are few data from the
United Kingdom about the rate of failed prehospital intubation in
trauma patients, the use of non-drug assisted intubation deserves further scrutiny.
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this is standard practice for paramedics and nurses in parts of the United States
but even if drugs are used, failed intubation rates can be
high.4
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: DL, GD, and TC conceived the idea for the study. DL collected the data and wrote the paper. The paper was discussed, revised, and edited by DL, GD, and TC. DL is the guarantor of the paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: None declared.
Competing interests: None declared.
This article is part of the BMJ's
randomised controlled trial of open peer review. Documentation relating
to the editorial decision making process is available on the BMJ's
website
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References |
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| 1. |
Guly UM, Mitchell RG, Cook R, Steedman DJ, Robertson CE.
Paramedics and technicians are equally successful at managing cardiac arrest outside hospital.
BMJ
1995;
310:
1091-1094 |
| 2. |
Hussain LM, Redmond AD.
Are pre-hospital deaths from accidental injury preventable?
BMJ
1994;
308:
1077-1080 |
| 3. | Pelucio M, Halligan L, Dhindsa H. Out-of-hospital experience with the syringe esophageal detector device. Acad Emerg Med 1997; 4: 563-568[Medline]. |
| 4. | Blostein PA, Koestner AJ, Hoak S. Failed rapid sequence intubation in trauma patients: Esophageal tracheal Combitube is a useful adjunct. J Trauma 1998; 44: 534-535[Medline]. |
| 5. |
Cooke MW.
How much to do at the accident scene?
BMJ
1999;
319:
1150 |
(Accepted 23 March 2001)
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