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Title: A retrospective analysis of the intubations performed during 5 years of helicopter emergency medical service in Amsterdam. Author: Slagt C, Zondervan A, Patka P, de Lange JJ. Journal: Air Med J; 2004; 23(5):36-7. PubMed ID: 15337954. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Different skilled personnel perform prehospital airway management, by far one of the most challenging skills with major consequences upon failure. SETTING: The setting for this study was the helicopter emergency medical service at the Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of all medical charts of intubated trauma patients in the period from May 1995 to May 2000. We focused on intubation reasons and conditions. RESULTS: In 43 of 653 patients (7%) the process of intubation was recorded as being difficult, leading to 5 failed intubations (11.6%). In 432 of 653 trauma victims (66%), general anaesthesia was required before intubation. Forty (9%) of these patients died, most soon after arrival in the hospital. The clinical condition of 221 (34%) patients was so poor that they did not require additional drugs for intubation; 73% of those patients died, with two-thirds dying at the accident site. CONCLUSION: The rate of difficult intubation in this analysis is low (7%). The overall airway failure (11.6%) is the same as seen in the literature when sedation and relaxation are used. An adult trauma victim with a Revised Trauma Score of 0 has a very poor prognosis of survival.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]