Respiratory failure requiring endotracheal intubation occurs in as many as 40% of critically ill patients. Procedural complications including failed attempts at intubation, esophageal intubation, arterial oxygen desaturation, aspiration, hypotension, cardiac arrest, and death are common in this setting. While there are many important components of successful airway management in critical illness, the maintenance of adequate arterial hemoglobin saturation from procedure initiation until endotracheal tube placement is paramount as desaturation is the most common factor associated with peri-intubation cardiac arrest and death. Interventions that either shorten the duration of time required for tube placement or prolong the period before desaturation may be effective in improving outcome. The high rate of complications and the lack of existing evidence regarding the efficacy of current airway management techniques in shortening the time to airway establishment or prolonging the time to desaturation mandates further investigation. The primary hypothesis is that video laryngoscopy will be superior to direct laryngoscopy in successful first attempt at endotracheal intubation (defined by confirmed placement of an endotracheal tube in the trachea during first laryngoscopy attempt) of medical ICU patients by Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine fellows after controlling for the operator's past number of procedures with the equipment used. Also, the investigators hypothesize that the provision of apneic oxygenation during the endotracheal intubation procedure (defined as a nasal cannula with 15 liters per minute of oxygen flow placed prior to sedation or neuromuscular blockade and maintained until after completion of the procedure) will result in a higher arterial oxygen saturation nadir (defined as lowest noninvasive oxygenation saturation value observed between the administration of sedation and/or neuromuscular blockade and 2 minutes after successfully secured airway or death) compared to no apneic oxygenation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
150
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Successful First Attempt at Endotracheal Intubation (Defined by Confirmed Placement of an Endotracheal Tube in the Trachea During First Laryngoscopy Attempt) After Controlling for the Operator's Past Number of Procedures With the Equipment Used.
The primary outcome for the video laryngoscopy compared with direct laryngoscopy arm of the study will be the successful first attempt at endotracheal intubation (defined by confirmed placement of an endotracheal tube in the trachea during first laryngoscopy attempt) after controlling for the operator's past number of procedures with the equipment used.
Time frame: 1 hour
Arterial Oxygen Saturation Nadir (Defined as Lowest Noninvasive Oxygenation Saturation Value Observed Between the Administration of Sedation and/or Neuromuscular Blockade and 2 Minutes After Successfully Secured Airway or Death).
The primary outcome for the apneic oxygenation arm of the study is arterial oxygen saturation nadir (defined as lowest noninvasive oxygenation saturation value observed between the administration of sedation and/or neuromuscular blockade and 2 minutes after successfully secured airway or death).
Time frame: 1 hour
Procedure-related Mortality
Death within 1 hour of beginning the procedure
Time frame: 1 hour
ICU-mortality
Death from any cause in the ICU and at anytime after the procedure
Time frame: 28 days
Adjusted Lowest Arterial Oxygen Saturation During Procedure
Arterial oxygen saturation nadir (defined as lowest noninvasive oxygenation saturation value observed between the administration of sedation and/or neuromuscular blockade and 2 minutes after successfully secured airway or death) adjusted for arterial oxygen saturation at the time of administering intubation drugs.
Time frame: 1 hour
Ventilator-free Days
Number of days alive and free of mechanical ventilation after endotracheal intubation
Time frame: 28 days
Number of Esophageal Intubations Per Group
Number of esophageal intubations Per Study Group
Time frame: 1 hour
Grade View of the Glottis
Best Cormack-Lehane grade view of the glottis (grade 1-4) on first laryngoscopy attempt. Higher grades on the 1-4 scale indicate worse glottic views.
Time frame: 1 hour
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