Las 7 p's de la Secuencia de INTUBACIÓN rápida ¡en 5 minutos!
Advanced Airway Management in Emergency Settings
Introduction to Advanced Airway Management
- Advanced airway management is crucial for patients unable to maintain adequate respiratory function or requiring deep sedation. The primary goal is to secure the airway and prevent bronchoaspiration.
Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) Steps
Step 1: Preparation
- Organize all necessary materials, instruments, and medications for the procedure, including tracheal tubes, oxygen supply, bag-mask ventilation equipment, and vital signs monitoring tools. Assess the airway using predictors of difficult intubation.
Step 2: Preoxygenation
- Administer 100% oxygen via bag-mask ventilation while minimizing positive pressure to reduce the risk of gastric insufflation and subsequent regurgitation. This step aims to replace nitrogen in functional residual capacity with oxygen, extending safe intubation time to approximately 6-8 minutes.
Step 3: Pretreatment
- Use medications like lidocaine, fentanyl, and atropine to mitigate complications such as bradycardia or excessive secretions during intubation. Lidocaine helps prevent bronchospasm; fentanyl provides analgesia; atropine is useful in children or patients with bradycardia or abundant secretions.
Step 4: Induction and Muscle Paralysis
- Administer a neuromuscular blocker alongside an induction agent for loss of consciousness and complete muscle relaxation. Selection of sedatives depends on clinical scenario, patient condition, and medical staff experience. Commonly used agents include benzodiazepines, opioids like remifentanil or propofol for induction; succinylcholine and rocuronium as muscle relaxants.
Step 5: Positioning
- Align the oral axis, laryngeal axis, and pharyngeal axis through neck extension and chin elevation techniques (Sellick maneuver). This positioning reduces regurgitation risk but may be contraindicated if intubation difficulties are anticipated.
Step 6: Tube Placement