Rapid airway assessment in emergencies

What “rapid airway assessment” is (and why it matters)

  • A fast bedside check to answer 3 questions: (1) Is the airway currently threatened? (2) Can I oxygenate/ventilate now? (3) What is my safest plan to secure the airway (and what are my backups)?
  • In emergencies, the priority is oxygenation (getting oxygen into the lungs), not “getting the tube in”.
  • Aim to identify: obstruction, aspiration risk, predicted difficulty with mask ventilation/supraglottic airway (SGA)/intubation, and whether a front-of-neck airway might be needed.
  • Reassess repeatedly: airway status can change quickly (vomit, swelling, reduced consciousness, fatigue).

Immediate first look: “Is this airway safe right now?”

  • Listen: stridor (high-pitched noise on breathing in), gurgling, snoring, silence (very concerning).
  • Look: work of breathing, use of accessory muscles, tracheal tug, cyanosis, agitation/confusion, inability to speak in full sentences.
  • Feel: air movement at mouth/nose; check for facial/neck swelling, surgical emphysema, tenderness/trauma.
  • Check consciousness: reduced GCS increases risk of obstruction and aspiration.
  • If in doubt, treat as threatened airway and call for senior help early.

Rapid ABC approach (airway-focused)

  • A: Airway patency and protection (can they maintain their own airway? are they at risk of aspiration?).
  • B: Breathing effectiveness (rate, effort, chest movement, SpO2, end-tidal CO2 if available).
  • C: Circulation matters for airway decisions: shock/low BP increases risk with induction drugs; consider resuscitation before intubation if possible.
  • Always start oxygen immediately: high-flow oxygen via non-rebreathe mask; consider nasal cannulae for apnoeic oxygenation if preparing to intubate.

Simple bedside predictors (quick and useful)

  • Mouth opening: <3 finger breadths suggests harder laryngoscopy and SGA insertion.
  • Neck movement: limited extension (arthritis, collars, trauma) makes laryngoscopy harder.
  • Mallampati (if cooperative): higher grade suggests less space; do not delay urgent care to obtain it.
  • Jaw protrusion / mandibular space: receding jaw, small chin can predict difficulty.
  • Obesity, beard, edentulous, facial trauma: often harder mask ventilation.
  • Previous anaesthetic record: any prior difficult airway, awake intubation, or front-of-neck airway is highly relevant.

Common emergency airway scenarios and what to look for

  • Reduced consciousness (overdose, head injury, seizures): snoring/obstruction, vomiting/aspiration risk; consider airway adjuncts and early definitive airway if not protecting airway.
  • Upper airway obstruction (anaphylaxis, angioedema, infection, tumour): stridor, swelling, voice change; avoid repeated attempts—call ENT/anaesthetics early and prepare for front-of-neck access.
  • Trauma: blood, broken teeth, facial fractures; assume full stomach; consider C-spine precautions; suction is essential.
  • Asthma/COPD: may be hard to ventilate; focus on oxygenation, bronchodilators, avoid dynamic hyperinflation; intubation can be high risk—get senior help.
  • GI bleed/vomiting: high aspiration risk; suction-ready, head-up if possible, consider rapid sequence induction (RSI) with experienced operator.
  • Burns/inhalational injury: soot, hoarseness, facial burns; swelling can worsen—early senior review and consider early intubation.

Practical “first actions” that buy time

  • Position: head-up (ramped) for obese/respiratory distress; “sniffing” position if no C-spine concern; jaw thrust if obstructed.
  • Airway adjuncts: oropharyngeal airway (OPA) for unconscious patients; nasopharyngeal airway (NPA) if mouth won’t open (avoid if suspected base of skull fracture).
  • Suction: have it on and in your hand early (blood/vomit is common).
  • Two-person mask ventilation: one person holds mask with two hands (jaw thrust), the other squeezes bag; use PEEP valve if available.
  • If mask ventilation is poor: add OPA/NPA, reposition, check seal, consider SGA early rather than struggling.

Choosing a plan quickly: Plan A–D mindset

  • Plan A: best first attempt at securing airway (often video laryngoscopy if available, with optimal positioning and suction).
  • Plan B: oxygenation with SGA if intubation fails or is not immediately possible.
  • Plan C: face-mask ventilation (two-person) if SGA fails; wake the patient if feasible (often not in true emergencies).
  • Plan D: emergency front-of-neck airway (eFONA) if you cannot oxygenate (CICO: can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate).
  • Limit attempts: repeated laryngoscopy worsens swelling/bleeding and reduces oxygen reserves; change something each attempt (operator, device, position, blade, bougie).

Calling for help and team setup (non-technical skills)

  • Call early: senior anaesthetist, ODP/assistant, ENT (if obstruction), ICU, and emergency team as appropriate.
  • Allocate roles: airway operator, assistant (suction, cricoid if used, drugs), monitoring, runner, documentation/timekeeper.
  • Say the plan out loud: “Plan A is…, if fail then Plan B…, if can’t oxygenate then Plan D…”.
  • Prepare essential kit: oxygen, suction, bag-mask, airway adjuncts, SGA, laryngoscope/video, bougie, ETT sizes, capnography, front-of-neck kit.

Minimum monitoring and confirmation

  • Use full monitoring whenever possible: ECG, SpO2, non-invasive BP, capnography.
  • Capnography (end-tidal CO2) is the best way to confirm tracheal intubation and ongoing ventilation; absence should prompt immediate reassessment.
  • If capnography is unreliable (low flow states), use multiple signs: chest rise, auscultation, misting, improving oxygenation—but treat uncertainty as oesophageal until proven otherwise.
  • After securing airway: reassess ventilation pressures, breath sounds, tube depth, and haemodynamics; consider gastric decompression if needed.
What are the first 3 things I should do when I’m worried about an airway?

• Give high-flow oxygen • Call for help early (senior + assistant) • Open the airway and suction (position, jaw thrust, OPA/NPA, suction ready)

What does “threatened airway” mean?

• Airway is currently patent but likely to obstruct soon (e.g., swelling, bleeding, reduced consciousness) • Treat as time-critical: plan early, escalate early

What quick signs suggest upper airway obstruction?

• Stridor, hoarse voice, difficulty swallowing, drooling • Increased work of breathing, tracheal tug • Poor air entry/noisy breathing or silent chest (late sign)

How do I quickly assess aspiration risk?

• Vomit/blood in mouth, GI bleed, bowel obstruction • Reduced consciousness or seizures • Recent food intake (often unknown in emergencies—assume full stomach if unsure)

What predicts difficult mask ventilation?

• Obesity, beard, older age, edentulous • Reduced jaw movement, facial trauma • Obstruction/secretions (blood/vomit) and poor positioning

When should I move early to an SGA?

• If two-person mask ventilation is still inadequate after basic fixes (position, seal, adjuncts) • If you need a rapid oxygenation “bridge” while planning next steps

What is CICO and what should I do?

• CICO = can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate • Declare it clearly, call for immediate help, and proceed to emergency front-of-neck airway without delay

How many intubation attempts are reasonable in an emergency?

• Keep attempts to a minimum; repeated attempts increase harm • If the first attempt fails, change something significant (operator/device/position) and ensure oxygenation between attempts

What is the single best confirmation of tracheal tube placement?

• Continuous waveform capnography (end-tidal CO2) • If absent or doubtful: reassess immediately and consider oesophageal intubation until proven otherwise

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