Advancing emergency airway management practice and research
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- Tadahiro Goto
- Graduate School of Medical Sciences University of Fukui Fukui Japan
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- Yukari Goto
- Department of Emergency and Critical Care Nagoya University Hospital Nagoya Aichi Japan
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- Yusuke Hagiwara
- Department of Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Tokyo Metropolitan Children's Medical Centre Fuchu Tokyo Japan
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- Hiroshi Okamoto
- Department of Critical Care Medicine St. Luke's International Hospital Tokyo Japan
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- Hiroko Watase
- Department of Surgery University of Washington Seattle Washington
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- Kohei Hasegawa
- Department of Emergency Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts
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説明
<jats:sec><jats:label /><jats:p>Emergency airway management is one of the vital resuscitative procedures undertaken in the emergency department (<jats:styled-content style="fixed-case">ED</jats:styled-content>). Despite its clinical and research importance in the care of critically ill and injured patients, earlier studies have documented suboptimal intubation performance and high adverse event rates with a wide variation across the <jats:styled-content style="fixed-case">ED</jats:styled-content>s. The optimal emergency airway management strategies remain to be established and their dissemination to the entire nation is a challenging task. This article reviews the current published works on emergency airway management with a focus on the use of airway management algorithms as well as the importance of first‐pass success and systematic use of rescue intubation strategies. Additionally, the review summarizes the current evidence for each of the important airway management processes, such as assessment of the difficult airway, preparation (e.g., positioning and oxygenation), intubation methods (e.g., rapid sequence intubation), medications (e.g., premedications, sedatives, and neuromuscular blockades), devices (e.g., direct and video laryngoscopy and supraglottic devises), and rescue intubation strategies (e.g., airway adjuncts and rescue intubators), as well as the airway management in distinct patient populations (i.e., trauma, cardiac arrest, and pediatric patients). Well‐designed, rigorously conducted, multicenter studies that prospectively and comprehensively characterize emergency airway management should provide clinicians with important opportunities for improving the quality and safety of airway management practice. Such data will not only advance research into the determination of optimal airway management strategies but also facilitate the development of clinical guidelines, which will, in turn, improve the outcomes of critically ill and injured patients in the ED.</jats:p></jats:sec>
収録刊行物
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- Acute Medicine & Surgery
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Acute Medicine & Surgery 6 (4), 336-351, 2019-05-21
Wiley
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キーワード
詳細情報 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1361137044575104128
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- DOI
- 10.1002/ams2.428
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- ISSN
- 20528817
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- PubMed
- 31592072
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- データソース種別
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- Crossref
- OpenAIRE