Pre-oxygenation using high-flow nasal oxygen vs. tight facemask during rapid sequence induction.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
33599993
Description
Pre-oxygenation using high-flow nasal oxygen can decrease the risk of desaturation during rapid sequence induction in patients undergoing emergency surgery. Previous studies were single-centre and often in limited settings. This randomised, international, multicentre trial compared high-flow nasal oxygen with standard facemask pre-oxygenation for rapid sequence induction in emergency surgery at all hours of the day and night. A total of 350 adult patients from six centres in Sweden and one in Switzerland undergoing emergency surgery where rapid sequence induction was required were included and randomly allocated to pre-oxygenation with 100% oxygen using high-flow nasal oxygen or a standard tight-fitting facemask. The primary outcome was the number of patients developing oxygen saturations <93% from the start of pre-oxygenation until 1 min after tracheal intubation. Data from 349 of 350 patients who entered the study were analysed (174 in the high-flow nasal oxygen group and 175 in the facemask group). No difference was detected in the number of patients desaturating <93%, five (2.9%) vs. six (3.4%) patients in the high-flow nasal oxygen and facemask group, respectively (p = 0.77). The risk of desaturation was not increased during on-call hours. No difference was seen in end-tidal carbon dioxide levels in the first breath after tracheal intubation or in the number of patients with signs of regurgitation between groups. These results confirm that high-flow nasal oxygen maintains adequate oxygen levels during pre-oxygenation for rapid sequence induction.
Date of Publication
2021-09
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
emergency intubation oxygen desaturation pre-oxygenation rapid sequence induction
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Sjöblom, A | |
Broms, J | |
Hedberg, M | |
Lodenius, Å | |
Furubacke, A | |
Henningsson, R | |
Wiklund, A | |
Theiler, L | |
Jonsson Fagerlund, M |
Additional Credits
Series
Anaesthesia
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN
0003-2409
Access(Rights)
open.access