Aspiration risk

What is aspiration and why it matters

  • Aspiration = stomach contents entering the airway/lungs (often during reduced consciousness or airway manipulation).
  • Main harms: airway obstruction, chemical pneumonitis (acid injury), infection (aspiration pneumonia), hypoxia, bronchospasm, ARDS.
  • Risk is highest at induction, during airway instrumentation, and at emergence/extubation.

Core concept: aspiration risk = (full stomach) + (unprotected airway)

  • “Full stomach” can be due to recent eating/drinking, delayed gastric emptying, obstruction, or reflux.
  • “Unprotected airway” means no cuffed tracheal tube (e.g., facemask, supraglottic airway, deep sedation).
  • Even with a tracheal tube, regurgitation can still occur (e.g., around cuff or before cuff inflated).

Common high-risk patients and situations (first-time scenarios)

  • Emergency surgery: trauma, acute abdomen, bowel obstruction, sepsis (often not fasted).
  • Pregnancy (especially 2nd/3rd trimester and labour): reflux risk and reduced lower oesophageal sphincter tone.
  • Obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea: difficult airway + reflux more likely.
  • GORD/hiatus hernia: higher regurgitation risk (symptoms matter).
  • Diabetes with gastroparesis, opioid use, severe pain, ileus: delayed gastric emptying.
  • Upper GI pathology: obstruction, bleeding, persistent vomiting.
  • Sedation outside theatre (endoscopy, ED): reduced airway reflexes without a secured airway.

Fasting basics (adult elective, typical UK practice)

  • Aim: reduce gastric volume and acidity, but fasting does not eliminate aspiration risk.
  • Typical minimums: 6 hours for solids/light meal; 2 hours for clear fluids.
  • Clear fluids = water, black tea/coffee (no milk), pulp-free juice; milk counts as a solid.
  • If fasting status is uncertain, treat as full stomach and escalate plan.

Pre-op assessment: quick aspiration risk screen

  • Ask: When did you last eat/drink? What exactly? Any vomiting or reflux today?
  • Look for: pregnancy, obesity, diabetes, bowel obstruction, opioids, severe pain, sepsis, reduced consciousness.
  • Consider airway plan: anticipated difficulty increases risk because airway instrumentation may be prolonged.
  • Document fasting status and aspiration risk in the anaesthetic plan; communicate with the team.

Reducing risk: practical steps before induction

  • Positioning: head-up (ramped in obesity) to improve pre-oxygenation and reduce regurgitation risk.
  • Choose the safest technique: full-stomach patients often need rapid sequence induction (RSI) with cuffed tracheal tube.
  • Have suction working and immediately available; consider two suctions for very high risk.
  • Plan for difficulty: ensure skilled help, airway adjuncts, videolaryngoscope availability, and a clear failed-intubation plan.
  • Consider aspiration prophylaxis when appropriate (local policy): non-particulate antacid (e.g., sodium citrate), H2 blocker, or PPI; prokinetic (e.g., metoclopramide) in selected cases.

Airway management choices: when to avoid a supraglottic airway (SGA)

  • Avoid SGA as the primary airway in high aspiration risk (e.g., bowel obstruction, active vomiting, not fasted emergency).
  • SGA may be acceptable in low-risk fasted elective cases, but it does not fully protect against aspiration.
  • If using an SGA, ensure adequate depth, avoid overinflation, and be ready to convert to intubation if regurgitation occurs.

RSI essentials (introductory, safety-focused)

  • Goal: minimise time between loss of airway reflexes and cuff inflation.
  • Key steps: thorough pre-oxygenation, head-up/ramped position, induction + fast-onset neuromuscular blocker, prompt laryngoscopy and intubation, confirm tube position, inflate cuff early.
  • Cricoid pressure: use only if trained and per local practice; release if it worsens view/ventilation or causes difficulty.
  • If intubation fails: follow the failed intubation/obstetric general anaesthesia algorithm; prioritise oxygenation.

If regurgitation/aspiration happens: immediate actions

  • Call for help early; prioritise oxygenation and airway control.
  • Turn head to the side and head-down tilt if feasible (reduce further aspiration).
  • Suction the mouth/pharynx immediately; suction through the tracheal tube after intubation.
  • Secure the airway with a cuffed tracheal tube as soon as possible (if not already).
  • Ventilate with 100% oxygen; treat bronchospasm if present (e.g., deepen anaesthesia, bronchodilators).
  • Consider bronchoscopy if particulate matter suspected or persistent obstruction.
  • Post-event: monitor closely (oxygenation, chest signs, CXR if indicated), document clearly, and hand over to recovery/ICU.

Post-op considerations after suspected aspiration

  • Not all aspiration needs antibiotics: chemical pneumonitis is inflammatory; antibiotics if infection suspected (fever, rising inflammatory markers, purulent sputum, consolidation) or high risk of contaminated aspirate.
  • Observe for delayed deterioration (hypoxia, increased work of breathing) for several hours; low threshold for HDU/ICU if significant event.
  • Provide clear patient communication and safety-netting; complete incident reporting per local policy.
What is the difference between aspiration pneumonitis and aspiration pneumonia?

– Pneumonitis: chemical injury from acidic gastric contents; may occur rapidly after aspiration. – Pneumonia: infection from aspirated contaminated material; tends to evolve over time. – Antibiotics are not automatic for pneumonitis; use clinical judgement.

Does fasting eliminate aspiration risk?

– No. It reduces risk but does not remove it. – Delayed gastric emptying, reflux, opioids, pregnancy, and emergencies can still mean a “full stomach”.

When should I treat a patient as ‘full stomach’?

– Unknown/uncertain fasting status. – Emergency surgery. – Active vomiting, bowel obstruction, upper GI bleeding. – Significant reflux symptoms, pregnancy in labour, diabetes with gastroparesis.

What are the usual fasting times for elective adults?

– 6 hours for solids/light meal. – 2 hours for clear fluids. – Milk is not a clear fluid.

Why is aspiration risk higher at induction and emergence?

– Airway reflexes are reduced. – Airway is being manipulated. – Coughing/straining or light anaesthesia can provoke regurgitation.

Is a supraglottic airway protective against aspiration?

– Not reliably. – It may reduce gastric insufflation compared with facemask in some cases, but it does not seal the trachea like a cuffed tube.

What should I have ready for a high aspiration risk induction?

– Working suction (ideally two). – Full airway plan including videolaryngoscope and rescue devices. – Drugs drawn up and labelled; plan for rapid intubation and confirmation. – Skilled assistance and clear communication.

What are the first steps if I see regurgitation during induction?

– Call for help. – Suction immediately. – Head-down/turn head if feasible. – Secure airway with cuffed tube ASAP and ventilate with 100% oxygen.

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