Sara Gray, MD
Emergency Medicine/Critical Care
Associate Professor at the University of Toronto
St. Michael’s Hospital
Twitter: @EmICUcanada
Presentation Objectives:
- Review when and how to extubate that ED patient who no longer need their tube
- Refresh your skill set to ensure you are prepared for this procedure
Extubation in the ED:
- Who
- Anatomic and physiologic simple intubation
- Indication for intubation fully resolved (post-intoxication, post procedure, post seizure, DNR, etc…)
- When
- Sedation/paralysis worn off
- Able to follow commands (i.e. lift head off bed)
- Hemodynamically stable
- C-spine cleared
- Cuff leak present (i.e. airway not swollen)
- Spontaneous breathing trial (SBT) – PEEP ≤5 + PSV ≤5 for 30min
- How
- Pre-oxygenate patient
- Have intubation gear set up just in case
- Suction ETT out
- Remove devices securing tube
- Coach the patient – Take a deep breath in, and hold it
- Deflate the ETT cuff
- Pull the ETT out
- Suction mouth out
- Place patient on O2
- Monitor patient for 1 – 2hrs
- 3 possibilities
- Patient does great – Disposition
- Patient needs some assistance – NIV
- Patient struggling – Re-intubate
- 3 possibilities
Post Peer Reviewed By: Salim R. Rezaie, MD (Twitter: @srrezaie)
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