Accidental Extubation
Accidental Extubation
Clinical Setting
I: You are the ICU registrar called by the nurse of the patient in bed 3
S: Nurse reports patient in what looks like atrial fibrillation
B: 76M morbidly obese patient, recently admitted with septic shock secondary to necrotising fasciitis
A: Low tidal volumes on ventilator and atrial fibrillation
R: Called for help
Potential Clinical Course
- Initially A ETT, B SpO2 95% on FiO2 0.3 PSIMV at 16bpm, low VTs, ETCO2 3.5kPa, quiet breath sounds bilaterally, C HR92bpm AF, BP 118/62, D Sedated
- Falling VTs, falling saturations, loss of ETCO2 trace
- Examination reveals ETT sitting supraglotically
- Saturations continue to fall
- Remove ETT
- Proceed with attempted re-intubation – impossible intubation – proceeds down DAS algorithm
- Difficult but possible FM ventilation – only with 2 handed technique, repositioning and adjuncts
- Calls for help and hands over patient
Information for Faculty
- Initial settings:
- SpO2 95% on FiO2 0.3
- ETCO2 3.5kPa
- RR 16/min
- Quiet breath sounds through both lung fields
- HR82bpm AF
- BP 118/62
- Progress to:
- SpO2 92% on FiO2 0.3
- ETCO2 2.5kPa
- Quiet breath sounds throughout both lung fields
- HR 90bpm AF
- BP 111/57
- Progress to:
- SpO2 92%
- Loss of ETCO2 trace
- Absent breath sounds
- Increase HR to 115bpm AF
- BP 102/48
- On induction of anaesthesia/NMBD:
- SpO2 90%
- RR zero
- Absent breath sounds
- Reduce BP to 82/45
- Increase HR to 128bpm
- Further observations depend upon actions
Faculty Roles
Bedside Nurse 1:
- You are a CNS
- You are looking after a 76M with septic shock
- You have noticed the patient is in AF and want to know, from the registrar, if this is old or new?
- You have no other concerns except that the patient’s tidal volumes are a little low, but you’d expect that with a morbidly obese patient, and have increased the respiratory rate accordingly
- You take direction well, and can perform tasks asked if you in a timely fashion, you just lack impetus
- If the candidate asks the patient has been a little restless requiring the odd bolus of propofol
- During the failed intubation process you repeatedly suggest trying to intubate the patient again.
Bedside Nurse 2:
- You are a new starter – you have never seen an airway emergency before
- You are quite startled when asked questions/given directions, requiring instructions to be repeated to you
- If the candidate names equipment using technical terms then you inform them that you don’t know what that is eg bougie
- You are keen to help, but are unwilling to do anything beyond your skill set .
HiLLO: 10