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20110720_S3-LL Polytrauma DGU_final_eng_cleaned_mc_korrigiert

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<strong>S3</strong> Guideline on Treatment of Patients with Severe and Multiple Injuries<br />

Explanation:<br />

In the prehospital and in-hospital phases, capnometry/capnography must always be used during<br />

endotracheal intubation for monitoring the placement of the tube and then to reduce incidence of<br />

dislocation and monitor ventilation. Capnography is an essential component here in monitoring<br />

the intubated and ventilated patient [74]. Normoventilation should be carried out in<br />

endotracheally intubated and anesthetized trauma patients. From emergency room treatment<br />

onwards, ventilation must be monitored and controlled by frequent arterial blood gas analyses.<br />

Capnography for monitoring tube placement and dislocation<br />

The most serious complication in endotracheal intubation is an unrecognized esophageal<br />

intubation, which can lead to the death of the patient. This is why, both prehospital and inhospital,<br />

all methods must be applied to recognize esophageal intubation and remedy it<br />

immediately.<br />

The percentage of esophageal intubations reported in the literature starts at less than 1% [100,<br />

106] spanning 2% [40], 6% [75], and reaching almost 17% [53]. Moreover, a high case fatality<br />

rate was shown as a result of tube misplacement in the hypopharynx (33%) or in the esophagus<br />

(56%) [53]. Esophageal intubation is thus not a rare event and, particularly in recent years,<br />

various studies have examined this catastrophic complication of endotracheal intubation in<br />

Germany as well. In a prospective observational study, helicopter emergency physicians trained<br />

in anesthesiology identified an esophageal tube placement in 6 out of 84 (7.1%) trauma patients,<br />

who had been intubated by land-based emergency physicians before arrival of the helicopter, and<br />

an endobronchial tube placement in 11 (13.1%) [95]. The case fatality rate of esophageally<br />

intubated patients was 80% in this study. In another prospective study with 598 patients in a<br />

German emergency physician system, the rate of esophageal intubations by non-medical<br />

personnel or physicians before arrival of the actual emergency physician system was 3.2% [92].<br />

Another prospective observational study revealed esophageal intubation in 5.1% of 58 patients,<br />

who had been intubated by the land-based emergency service or emergency physician before<br />

arrival of the helicopter emergency physician trained in anesthesiology [43]. In a study focusing<br />

on the admitting emergency room team, esophageal intubation was found in 4 out of 375<br />

prehospital intubated and ventilated patients (1.1%) [41].<br />

In a prospective observational study of 153 patients, evidence showed that none of the patients<br />

who had been monitored by capnography had an unrecognized misplaced intubation, but 14 out<br />

of the 60 patients (23.3%) not monitored by capnography had [83]. Capnography therefore<br />

belongs in the standard equipment of the anesthesiology workplace and has dramatically<br />

increased the safety of anesthesia.<br />

In a prospective observational study with 81 patients (n = 58 severe traumatic brain injury [TBI],<br />

n = 6 maxillofacial trauma, n = 17 multiple injuries), markedly greater sensitivity and specificity<br />

was demonstrated by monitoring tube placement by capnography compared to auscultation only<br />

(sensitivity: 100 versus 94%; specificity: 100 versus 66%, p < 0.01) [44]. These data prove that<br />

capnography must always be used for monitoring tube placement.<br />

Prehospital – Airway management, ventilation and emergency anesthesia 29

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