#JanuAIRWAY Day 13. Jet Ventilation – this is a bit more niche in anaesthesia / airway management, but fascinating. Here’s a #OnePager covering the basics. Let’s dive in… #JanuAIRWAY 1/8
2 modes of jet ventilation – low frequency (<60 jets/min) & high frequency (>60). Frequency determines device. 2 commonly used devices – Manujet (modified hand operated Sanders injector) or Monsoon (specialised jet ventilator). Here’s a some #OnePagers #JanuAIRWAY 2/8
Several different potential mechanisms to apnoic oxygenation during HFJV, including:
-Bulk flow
-Laminar flow
-Taylor dispersion
-Pendelluft
-Molecular diffusion
-Cardiogenic mixing derangedphysiology.com has a great article & this diagram #FOAMed #JanuAIRWAY 3/8
Key clinical pearl - the critical airway diameter for exhalation. Dworkin et al (sciencedirect.com/science/articl…) showed jetting across a Glottis <4.0-4.5mm in diameter leads to gas trapping, independent of jet ventilator settings. There MUST be a path for exhalation! #JanuAIRWAY 4/8
3 routes:
- Supraglottic - attached to a surgical laryngoscope
- Transglottic - using a jet ventilation catheter
- Transtracheal - using a cannula via the cricothyroid membrane
Here's some #OnePagers on surgical laryngoscopes and jet ventilation catheters #JanuAIRWAY 5/8
Increasingly jet ventilation is being used outside of ENT, in interventional radiology and cardiac cath labs to improve image quality. In these environments, the following set-up has been used to ensure airway protection, whilst allowing jet ventilation. #JanuAIRWAY 7/8
Hope that helps. Tomorrow we'll take a look into at One Lung Ventilation. See you then! #JanuAIRWAY 8/8
*Disclaimer: Inclusion of content (equipment, techniques and scoring systems etc.) in #JanuAIRWAY does not constitute DAS endorsement
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Next up - Dr Craig Lyons, editor at @Anaes_Reports
@Anaes_Reports Challenges HFNO research: choosing an outcome of value is tricky (may not be patient centred), research unblinded, and research world is different (closed mouth, no talking, proper 3 minutes). to how we practise in the real world! Airway providers are different & so are patients
@Anaes_Reports We can't necessarily amalgamate info from many different categories of patients from lots of different contexts in meta-analyses
#JanuAirway Day 2. Yesterday highlighted the need for strategy, so let’s talk Airway Planning. Decision making = the true art of airway management! NAP4 @doctimcook showed that poor judgement is implicated in many airway complications. This #OnePager covers the major themes. 1/9
#JanuAirway What's the issue? We encounter difficult airways relatively infrequently, & complications are rare. Low exposure leads to high anxiety. Add in multiple options @huitink & Bouwman suggest >1mill combinations of options to oxygenate. More options = more anxiety 2/9
Cognitive load can lead to decision fatigue & increasing bias & poorer decisions. Metacognition can help debias. Chew et al’s () came up with the TWED checklist which can help: - 3/9 ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…
Welcome to #JanuAIRWAY2024. Every weekday we'll be bringing you Airway #FOAMed. Starting off with management of transgender airway -here's a #OnePager. It's a huge topic going beyond just the airway. Thanks to Drs @LukeFlower1 @drkamillak & Alice Humphreys for all their help! 1/7
The facts are that there's a huge knowledge gap when it comes to healthcare providers and gender diverse patients. Let's start with terminology, the gender continuum and principles of gender-affirming care - here's a #OnePager covering just that! 2/7
When it comes to peri-operative care, there are a number of effects that hormone therapy can have that depend on the type of transition. Additionally biochemical values also need to be interpreted with care. Check out this #OnePager 3/7
The law and airway management, looking at what we do through a different lens now with Maryanne Balkin. The tort of negligence has 4 elements: 1. duty of care 2. breach of standard of care 3. causation 4. injury or harm
Why do we used cuffed tracheal tubes in children? Starting the international session this afternoon, the links @dasairway has with other airway societies is wonderful
The subglottic area is the narrowest part in children, the resistance whilst advancing the ETT is due to stenosis in the subglottic region #DAS2022
Microcuff paediatric ETT have really changed practice, moving from uncuffed tubes to cuffed tubes in paediatric patients #DAS2022