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Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia

Background: Providing optimal patient care in the challenging, uncontrolled, and sometimes hostile pre-hospital environment may require the use of potent analgesics and sedatives. During pre-hospital emergencies, narcotics or sedatives administered for sedation, anxiolysis, or analgesia to allow the...

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Autores principales: Pillay, Yugan, Gangaram, Padarath, Pillay, Bernard Christopher, Howland, Ian, Ludick, Beverley Dawn, Howard, Ian, Castle, Nicholas Raymond
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: HBKU Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851942/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.68
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author Pillay, Yugan
Gangaram, Padarath
Pillay, Bernard Christopher
Howland, Ian
Ludick, Beverley Dawn
Howard, Ian
Castle, Nicholas Raymond
author_facet Pillay, Yugan
Gangaram, Padarath
Pillay, Bernard Christopher
Howland, Ian
Ludick, Beverley Dawn
Howard, Ian
Castle, Nicholas Raymond
author_sort Pillay, Yugan
collection PubMed
description Background: Providing optimal patient care in the challenging, uncontrolled, and sometimes hostile pre-hospital environment may require the use of potent analgesics and sedatives. During pre-hospital emergencies, narcotics or sedatives administered for sedation, anxiolysis, or analgesia to allow the patient to tolerate unpleasant procedures, such as traction splint application, can result in cardiovascular and respiratory adverse events.(1) Early recognition of poor oxygenation may prevent unnecessary patient hypoxia. The European Society of Anaesthesiology and the American Society of Anaesthesiologist mandate continuous capnography, in addition to standard monitoring which include pulse oximetry, 4-lead ECG, blood pressure, and heart rate measurements.(1,2) Capnography refers to the non-invasive measurement of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) in exhaled breath. Monitoring respiratory status provides early warning, thereby allowing clinicians to intervene before the onset of respiratory depression, potentially leading to bradypnoea, apnoea, hypoxia, and death.(3) In addition, late identification of respiratory failure may lead to unnecessary endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, increasing risk of protracted hospital stay and associated hospital-acquired infections. Oxygenation and ventilation must be measured in both intubated and spontaneously breathing patients. While clinical indicators like chest rise or the plethysmography-derived respiratory rate can be used, monitoring the capnographic waveform for hypopnoeic and bradypnoeic patterns provides the clinician with a quick, accurate indication of acute adverse respiratory events.(4) In two randomized trials, patients monitored with capnography in addition to standard of care, experienced significantly fewer episodes of hypoxia than those monitored without capnography.(3,5) Hamad Medical Corporation Ambulance Service (HMCAS) in Qatar introduced a new clinical practice guideline (CPG) for safe sedation and monitoring in August 2017, mandating the routine use of capnography for all sedated patients. Safe sedation is achieved when the patient's oxygenation, ventilation, or haemodynamic status is not negatively impacted by the sedation procedure. Methods: The study aimed to describe trends in the use of capnography and other monitoring modalities for patients receiving Ketamine, Fentanyl, or Midazolam. Retrospective quantitative analysis of an existing HMCAS medical records database linked to a Business Intelligence (BI) tool enabled direct analysis on the tool and via a linked Microsoft Excel(®) spreadsheet, reviewing all emergency cases from 1st January 2017 to 31st December 2018. Frequency analysis and measures of central tendency was applied to the relevant clinical variables. All patient and practitioner identifiable data fields were redacted and not reported on. Results: Oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) and blood pressure monitoring was used on all patients (n = 5157, 100%), 4-lead ECG was placed on 3710 (72%) patients, while capnography was used on 4096 patients (79%, range = 39% to 99%). Capnography usage steadily improved over the 24-month period, especially for patients receiving Fentanyl (Figure 1). Conclusion: There was a significant improvement in the use of capnography during monitoring of patients that received Fentanyl, Ketamine, or Midazolam, with the most significant improvement for patients receiving Fentanyl alone. Further studies are required to determine the impact of this improvement on actual adverse event frequency.
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spelling pubmed-68519422019-11-22 Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia Pillay, Yugan Gangaram, Padarath Pillay, Bernard Christopher Howland, Ian Ludick, Beverley Dawn Howard, Ian Castle, Nicholas Raymond Qatar Med J Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract Background: Providing optimal patient care in the challenging, uncontrolled, and sometimes hostile pre-hospital environment may require the use of potent analgesics and sedatives. During pre-hospital emergencies, narcotics or sedatives administered for sedation, anxiolysis, or analgesia to allow the patient to tolerate unpleasant procedures, such as traction splint application, can result in cardiovascular and respiratory adverse events.(1) Early recognition of poor oxygenation may prevent unnecessary patient hypoxia. The European Society of Anaesthesiology and the American Society of Anaesthesiologist mandate continuous capnography, in addition to standard monitoring which include pulse oximetry, 4-lead ECG, blood pressure, and heart rate measurements.(1,2) Capnography refers to the non-invasive measurement of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) in exhaled breath. Monitoring respiratory status provides early warning, thereby allowing clinicians to intervene before the onset of respiratory depression, potentially leading to bradypnoea, apnoea, hypoxia, and death.(3) In addition, late identification of respiratory failure may lead to unnecessary endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, increasing risk of protracted hospital stay and associated hospital-acquired infections. Oxygenation and ventilation must be measured in both intubated and spontaneously breathing patients. While clinical indicators like chest rise or the plethysmography-derived respiratory rate can be used, monitoring the capnographic waveform for hypopnoeic and bradypnoeic patterns provides the clinician with a quick, accurate indication of acute adverse respiratory events.(4) In two randomized trials, patients monitored with capnography in addition to standard of care, experienced significantly fewer episodes of hypoxia than those monitored without capnography.(3,5) Hamad Medical Corporation Ambulance Service (HMCAS) in Qatar introduced a new clinical practice guideline (CPG) for safe sedation and monitoring in August 2017, mandating the routine use of capnography for all sedated patients. Safe sedation is achieved when the patient's oxygenation, ventilation, or haemodynamic status is not negatively impacted by the sedation procedure. Methods: The study aimed to describe trends in the use of capnography and other monitoring modalities for patients receiving Ketamine, Fentanyl, or Midazolam. Retrospective quantitative analysis of an existing HMCAS medical records database linked to a Business Intelligence (BI) tool enabled direct analysis on the tool and via a linked Microsoft Excel(®) spreadsheet, reviewing all emergency cases from 1st January 2017 to 31st December 2018. Frequency analysis and measures of central tendency was applied to the relevant clinical variables. All patient and practitioner identifiable data fields were redacted and not reported on. Results: Oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) and blood pressure monitoring was used on all patients (n = 5157, 100%), 4-lead ECG was placed on 3710 (72%) patients, while capnography was used on 4096 patients (79%, range = 39% to 99%). Capnography usage steadily improved over the 24-month period, especially for patients receiving Fentanyl (Figure 1). Conclusion: There was a significant improvement in the use of capnography during monitoring of patients that received Fentanyl, Ketamine, or Midazolam, with the most significant improvement for patients receiving Fentanyl alone. Further studies are required to determine the impact of this improvement on actual adverse event frequency. HBKU Press 2019-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6851942/ http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.68 Text en © 2019 Pillay, Gangaram, Pillay, Howland, Ludick, Howard, Castle, licensee HBKU Press. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license CC BY 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract
Pillay, Yugan
Gangaram, Padarath
Pillay, Bernard Christopher
Howland, Ian
Ludick, Beverley Dawn
Howard, Ian
Castle, Nicholas Raymond
Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title_full Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title_fullStr Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title_full_unstemmed Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title_short Pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
title_sort pre-hospital use of capnography during emergency sedation analgesia
topic Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851942/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.68
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