Blocked Tracheostomy
Blocked Tracheostomy
Clinical Setting
I: You are the ICU registrar and are called by the nurse to assess the patient in bed 5
S: Nurse wants a salbutamol prescription
B: 67M recently returned from theatre after surgical tracheostomy, fully mechanically ventilated and deeply sedated
A: High pressure alarms, falling saturations
R: Called for help
Potential Clinical Course
- Initially A Trachy, B SpO2 95% on FiO2 0.5, not ventilating, ETCO2 4.6kPa, reduced breath sounds, C HR 90bpm SR, BP113/67 D sedated
- Becomes more hypoxic and bradycardic
- If no intervention then cardiac collapse
- If appropriate management of blocked tracheostomy then patient will improve
- Identify blocked tracheostomy
- Remove tracheostomy and ventilate via bag valve mask
- Either stays with bag mask ventilation and calls for senior help or proceeds to intubate the patient orally.
Information for Faculty
- Initial settings: SpO2 95% on FiO2 0.5
- ETCO2 4.6kPa
- Reduced breath sounds bilaterally
- HR 90bpm
- BP 113/67
- Progress to: SpO2 90% whilst trachy in situ (on placement first sandbag)
- ETCO2 6.7kPa
- HR 116bpm
- BP 101/54
- Progress to: SpO2 86% (on placement second sandbag)
- ETCO2 absent
- HR 49bpm
- BP 88/42
- On removal of tracheostomy and manual ventilation:
- SpO2 86% then gradually up to 98%
- ETCO2 6.8kPa immediately on return to ventilator
- HR 49 then gradually up to 90bpm SR
- BP 88/42 then gradually up to 105/62
Faculty Roles
Bedside Nurse 1:
- You are a CNS
- You are looking after a 67M who is day 19 post a subarachnoid haemorrhage and coiling, who has recently returned from having a surgical tracheostomy sited
- Patient remains sedated and mechanically ventilated
- In the previous hour the patient has been fine – you do not volunteer he has just returned from his surgical tracheostomy
- In the past few minutes you have been struggling to ventilate the patient
- You are concerned he has bronchospasm as he has had asthma in the past, and ask if we could give him a nebuliser.
Bedside Nurse 2:
- You are a Staff Nurse with a few years ICU experience
- You are actively changing ventilator settings and listening to the patient’s chest as the candidate enters
- You are less convinced about bronchospasm and inform your nursing colleague that he has “quiet breath sounds”, when bronchospasm is raised you volunteer your auscultation findings.
HiLLO: 10