Ultraschall Med 2014; 35(05): 451-458
DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1366014
Original Article
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Bedside Ultrasound of the Neck Confirms Endotracheal Tube Position in Emergency Intubations

Ultraschall während der Notfallintubation bestätigt korrekte Tubuslokalisation
B. Hoffmann
1   Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston
,
J. P. Gullett
2   Emergency Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham
,
H. F. Hill
3   Emergency Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
,
D. Fuller
4   Emergency Medicine, Emergency Medicine Associates, Germantown
,
M. C. Westergaard
5   Emergency Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison
,
W. T. Hosek
6   Emergency Medicine, Onslow Memorial Hospital, Jacksonville
,
J. A. Smith
7   Pulmonary Medicine, University Hospital of South Manchester, Manchester
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

05 September 2013

18 December 2013

Publication Date:
11 July 2014 (online)

Abstract

Purpose: In controlled environments such as the operating room, bedside ultrasound (BUS) of the neck has shown high accuracy for distinguishing endotracheal (ETI) from esophageal intubations. We sought to determine the accuracy of BUS for endotracheal tube (ETT) position in the emergency department (ED) setting.

Materials and Methods: We assessed the utility of BUS in a single-center observational study in an ED setting. BUS was performed either simultaneously with ED intubation (S/ED), within < 3 minutes of ED intubation (A/ED), or in < 3 minutes of patient’s ED arrival after pre-hospital intubation (A/EMS). Trained ED providers performed BUS; intubators were blinded to ultrasound findings. We used Cormack and Lehane categories (CL) to classify intubation attempts as “easy” (CL-I/II), “moderate” (CL-III) and “difficult” (CL-IV). Additional data included the diagnostic accuracy of the sonographer and intubator compared to the clinical outcome, anatomy identified by sonography and time to diagnosis.

Results: During a 10-month period, 89 subjects with 115 intubation attempts were included in the study, and 86 patients/101 attempts with complete data were used in the study (63-easy, 19-moderate, 19-difficult). The sonographers achieved 100 % accuracy with respect to determining the correct ETT position utilizing an anterior neck approach, while the intubators’ accuracy in assessing correct tube location was 97 % compared to the clinical outcome. A blinded review of sonography findings confirmed all BUS anatomical findings. A sonographically empty esophagus was 100 % specific for endotracheal intubation, and a “double trachea sign” was 100 % sensitive and 91 % specific for esophageal intubation. The sonographic time to diagnosis was significantly faster than the intubator time to diagnosis (“easy” p < 0.001; n = 47; “moderate” p = 0.001; n = 15; “difficult” p < 0.001; n = 19); Wilcoxon test; A/EMS cases excluded).

Conclusion: In this emergency setting, ultrasound determined ETT locations rapidly with 100 % accuracy and independently of the CL-category.

Zusammenfassung

Ziel: Kann Ultraschall des Halses im Rahmen einer Notfallintubation verlässlich die Tubuslokalisation bestimmen?

Material und Methoden: Bei Patienten, mit Intubation in der Notfallambulanz oder vom Rettungsdienst wurde Ultraschall entweder simultan mit der Intubation (S/ED), < 3 Minuten nach Intubation in der Ambulanz (A/ED), oder < 3 Minuten nach Ankunft des vom Rettungsdienst intubierten Patienten durchgeführt (A/EMS), Schallergebnisse waren den Intubatoren oder dem klinischen Team nicht bekannt. Die Cormack-Lehane-Klassifikation wurde zur Einteilung in einfache (CL-I/II), moderate (CL-III), oder schwierige Intubationen (CL-IV) herangezogen.

Ergebnisse: Während der 10-monatigen Studiendauer wurden 89 Patienten mit 115 Intubationen in der Studie aufgenommen, 86 Patienten/101 Intubationen mit komplettem Datensatz wurden zur statistischen Auswertung herangezogen. Sonografie des Halses zur Bestimmung der Lokalisation des Trachealtubus war 100 % akurat, die Intubatoren erreichten eine Genauigkeit von 97 % im Vergleich zum klinischen Verlauf. Ein sonografisch leerer Ösophagus war 100 % spezifisch für eine tracheale Intubation, der sonografische Befund der „Doppeltrachea“ war 100 % sensitiv, 91 % spezifisch für Ösophagusintubation. Sonografische Diagnose war unabhängig vom Schwierigkeitsgrad der Intubation schneller (CL-I/II p < 0,001; n = 47; CL-III p = 0,001; n = 15; CL-IV p < 0,001; n = 19); Wilcoxon-Test; A/EMS-Fälle ausgeschlossen).

Schlussfolgerungen: Bei Notfallintubationen zeigte die Halssonografie eine sehr hohe Genauigkeit und schnelle Diagnosestellung zur Bestimmung der anatomischen Lage des Trachealtubus.

 
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