COVID ARDS Proning
COVID ARDS Proning
Clinical Setting:
I: You are the ICU registrar called by the nurse of the patient in bed 3
S: Nurse reports patient is hypoxic
B: 50F with COVID-19, presented after 10-day history of pleuritic chest pain, fevers, dry cough, and progressive difficulty in breathing. CTPA- no PE, ground glass consistent with COVID. Confirmed COVID positive. Day 1-2 on high flow oxygen, day 3-4 in CPAP, admitted to ICU overnight, intubated yesterday (Size 8.0, Grade II view, 2s cm at the teeth)
A: Hypoxic despite being on FiO2 0.8
R: Called for help
Potential Clinical Course:
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Initially A ETT, 22 cm at the teeth, B SpO2 89% on FiO2 0.8 PC-SIMV Pinsp 25, PEEP 12, Vt 290 ml, ETCO2 5 kPa, RR 22, bilateral air entry, C HR 65 bpm SR, BP 110/60, D Sedated+ paralysed
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If FiO2 is put up to 1.0- SpO2 still does not improve.
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Following initial assessment, patient remains hypoxic and the aim is for the candidate to decide to prone and to proceed with the proning
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Manage emergency proning safely
Info Sheet For Faculty
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Initial settings:
- SpO2 89% on FiO2 0.8
- Pinsp 25, PEEP 12, Vt 290
- EtCO2 5 kPa
- RR 22/min
- Bilateral air entry
- HR 65 bpm SR
- BP 110/60
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Progress to:
- SpO2 88% on FiO2 1.0
- Pinsp 25, PEEP 12, Vt 290
- EtCO2 5 kPa
- Bilateral air entry
- HR 65 bpm SR
- BP 110/60
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Progress to:
- SpO2 99% on FiO2 1.0 (once prone)
- Pinsp 25, PEEP 12, Vt 290
- EtCO2 5 kPa
- Bilateral air entry
- HR 65 bpm SR
- BP 110/60
Faculty Roles:
Bedside Nurse 1:
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You are a critical care nurse
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You are looking after a 50F with COVID-19, intubated yesterday
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You have noticed that despite being on 80% oxygen, her saturation is still hovering between 87% and 89%
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You are concerned that something is wrong or that something needs to be done about this.
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You take direction well, and can perform tasks asked if you in a timely fashion
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If the candidate asks nothing unexpected has happened. The patient just slowly gradually became more hypoxic.
Bedside Nurse 2:
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You are a new starter – you have never seen an ARDS patient before
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You are quite startled when asked questions/given directions, requiring instructions to be repeated to you
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If the candidate names equipment using technical terms then you inform them that you don’t know what that is eg bougie
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You are keen to help, but are unwilling to do anything beyond your skill set
ITU SHO:
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You are very junior and just started working in ITU
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You have never seen an ARDS patient and have never seen a prone patient
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You are keen but a bit worried that you do not understand what is going on
HiLLO: 6