RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To investigate complications of emergency endotracheal intubation (EEI), possibly facilitated by rapid-sequence induction, in the prehospital critical care setting: 1) the difficulty of intubation; 2) the cardiorespiratory consequences of intubation; 3) the relationship between the occurrence of complications and prognosis. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective non randomized, open study. PATIENTS: All patients treated over a 5-month period by a physician-manned ambulance service and requiring EEI. METHODS: Patients were allocated either in with cardiac arrest (CA) group or a group with maintained spontaneous circulation (SC). Difficulty of intubation was assessed by the number of attempts. RESULTS: Two hundred and twenty-four consecutive EEI were carried out by physicians (46%) and residents (38%) not trained in anaesthesia, anaesthetists (8%), or nurse anaesthetists (7%). Trachea was intubated after a maximum of three attempts in all patients. Success rate at the first attempt was 91%. It was 92% in CA patients (n = 76) and 90% in SC patients (P = 0.59). Anaesthetic induction, with (n = 112) or without (n = 12) succinylcholine, was used to facilitate 84% of intubations in SC patients. Complications occurred in 30 patients (20%). There was no relationship between the latter and hospital mortality, duration of ventilatory support, duration of stay in the intensive care unit. CONCLUSION: In this study, EEI in SC patients was frequently facilitated by rapid sequence induction and was associated with a high success rate at the first attempt, as in CA patients. Morbidity was low. All physicians involved in emergency airway management should be skilled in this technique.