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Airway Anesthesia Education Anesthesia Equipment and Technology Cardiac Case Studies Clinical Tips Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Human Physiology and Pathophysiology Leadership in Emergencies Outpatient Anesthesia Pharmacology Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#104 – At-home cardiorespiratory events following ambulatory surgery – Chuck Biddle, PhD, CRNA

Chuck Biddle PhD, CRNA is a Professor Emeritus of anesthesiology at Virginia Commonwealth University and served as the editor in chief of the AANA Journal for 35 years.  His anesthesia education & master’s degree are from Old Dominion University and he completed his PhD in Epidemiology at the University of Missouri.  

Chuck is one of my favorite people in the world of anesthesiology.  He’s one of those folks who have put the time in over decades to develop a true, deep mastery of their profession while at the same time bringing with them a level of authenticity, integrity and humility that garners true respect.  He’s a guide.  He’s helped countless physician & nurse anesthesiology trainees develop and gain a love of the work we do.  And one of the central focuses of his career has been fervently working to understand the things that put our patients at risk and develop research and insights for practice to advance patient safety.

Which brings us to this show.  

In this episode, Dr Biddle turns our attention to what happens to patients after they go home from day surgery.  We talk about a study his team did at VCU where they sent patients home with pulse oximeter monitors and tracked their course for 48 hours following day surgery. 

We talk how novel this idea is in that very few studies have actually looked at what happens to patients following ambulatory surgery and that a certain segment of these patients – those who have obstructive sleep apnea are at particular risk for devastating postoperative complications.  Chuck points to Jonathan Benumof’s, MD 2016 article in the Canadian Journal of Anesthesia titled Mismanagement of patients with obstructive sleep apnea may result in finding these patients dead in bed (full article below).  Dr Benumof is a world-renowned physician anesthesiology and expert in airway management and pulmonary physiology. He is a professor of anesthesiology at the University of California – San Diego’s School of Medicine. Over the 15 years prior to the publication of Dr Benumof’s article in which he served as an expert witness in litigation cases, he testified on 12 cases where OSA patients died within 48 hours of surgery.  In  the article, he unpacks each of those cases and provides the following prototypical dead in bed OSA patient:

“A 58-yr-old continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)-compliant male (170 cm, 120 kg, body mass index 40 kgm-2) with polysomnography (PSG)-proven severe OSA undergoes orthopedic, upper airway, or abdominal surgery under general anesthesia. The patient has an uncomplicated stay in the postanesthesia care unit until discharged to an unmonitored bed without CPAP or oxygen. After receiving small (and within standard of care) doses of narcotics for pain for 11 hr, the patient is found DIB [dead in bed]. Advanced cardiac life support is either not attempted or fails to return the patient to their baseline state of life (Benumof, 2016).”

This episode is one of those discussions that makes you see the work you do in a whole new light and gives you a renewed sense of ownership over making sure you and your colleagues are doing the right thing for your patients.  This show is coming out on 28 January 2024 and was originally recorded at VCU’s studio with a table top microphone back in the summer of 2017.  I apologize that the audio is a little hazy but the power of Dr Biddle’s research and passion for this topic are still very much relevant to providers today.  So with that, let’s get to the show!

Benumof, J. L. (2015). The elephant in the room is bigger than you think: finding obstructive sleep apnea patients dead in bed postoperatively. Anesthesia & Analgesia, 120(2), 491.

Hill, M. V., Stucke, R. S., McMahon, M. L., Beeman, J. L., & Barth Jr, R. J. (2018). An educational intervention decreases opioid prescribing after general surgical operations. Annals of surgery267(3), 468-472.

Biddle, C., Elam, C., Lahaye, L., Kerr, G., Chubb, L., & Verhulst, B. (2021). Predictors of at-home arterial oxygen desaturation events in ambulatory surgical patients. Journal of Patient Safety, 17(3), e186-e191. 

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Airway Anesthesia Education Anesthesia Equipment and Technology Case Studies Clinical Tips Leadership in Emergencies Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#93 – OR Fires with April Bourgoin, DNAP, CRNA

In this episode, I speak with Dr April Bourgoin, DNAP, CRNA about operating room fires – how they can start and how we can respond to them as anesthesia providers. This show was originally released in 4 years ago in February of 2019 on the podcast From the Head of the Bed and was recorded with a table top microphone so the audio is a little suboptimal, but I’m sure you’ll still find this to be a very hot topic that will smolder in your memory for years to come after they key details become seared into your clinical practice. Hopefully, this podcast will really help you turn up the heat on your OR fire prevention practices… and now that we have almost all of the puns put out, let me tell you about Dr Bougoin.

Dr Bourgoin completed her Master of Nursing Science (MSN) and Doctorate of Nurse Anesthesia Practice at Virginia Commonwealth University. Prior to becoming a CRNA, she served for eight years as an active duty commissioned officer in the Army with experience as a critical care Registered Nurse and flight nurse with the 82nd Airborne Dustoff medevac team. She served two combat tours prior to transferring to the Army Reserves at the rank of Major and then returned to school for her master’s and doctorate degrees in anesthesia.

Dr Bourgoin had a case in which there was an OR fire and we discuss that story in detail in this podcast. She then unpacks OR and airway fires for us, including contributing factors, prevention, crisis management and the importance of critical incident debriefing.

Currently, I have the incredible privilege in working closely with April to support our CRNA group at Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine. April is one of our 2 CRNA Supervisors and an invaluable part of our CRNA leadership team. I think you’re really going to enjoy hearing from her on this topic and in an upcoming episode on the pathophysiology of vaping associated lung injury.

In the show notes to this episode we have links to the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation’s infographics and video on OR fire prevention and safety, which are excellent resources to share with colleagues & classmates. We also link to a resource called Anesthesia eNonymous, which is a website hosted by faculty from Virginia Commonwealth University’s Nurse Anesthesia program where providers and anesthesia learners can anonymously share and read real stories of near misses, medical errors & other clinical experiences. As it’s been said: good judgment comes from bad judgment and it’s better to learn from others mistakes & bad judgement calls than having to make your own along the way. So be sure to check out the links in the show notes to this podcast that Dr Bourgoin has shared and with that, let’s get to the show!

Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation Fire Safety Video

Anesthesia e-Nonymous – Virginia Commonwealth University

APSF Fire Safety Video Contributes to 44% Decrease in Intraoperative Fires Since 2011

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Airway Anesthesia Equipment and Technology Clinical Tips Human Physiology and Pathophysiology Leadership in Emergencies Pharmacology Trauma

#87 – Combat Trauma Anesthesia with Dustin Degman, MSN, CRNA – Part 2

What’s up yall this is Jon Lowrance with Anesthesia Guidebook.  I am so pumped to bring you this series of 3 episodes on Combat Trauma Anesthesia!  

This is episode 87 and it’s part 2 off a three-part series with Dustin Degman, a CRNA formerly with the United States Army.

In the first episode, we discussed Dustin’s experience in Afghanistan serving at a forward operating base in Paktika Province in 2012 to 2013.  We talk about what makes up forward surgical teams and the role of CRNAs as the sole anesthesia provider on these teams.

In this part – part two, we discuss the principles of damage control resuscitation in the context of forward surgical bases and combat zones. While this discussion is focused on combat trauma anesthesia, the core underlying principles of damage control resuscitation hold true for civilian trauma centers.

And then in part three, we’re gonna come back and talk about the path to becoming a military CRNA and the importance of supporting our troops.  

This series was originally recorded in early 2015, just a year or so after Dustin had returned from Afghanistan and while the war there was still raging.  At the time, I was completing my anesthesia training at Western Carolina University and working on launching From the Head of the Bed… the podcast the preceded Anesthesia Guidebook.  Dustin was one of my professors and clinical faculty at WCU and was kind enough to volunteer his time for these interviews back then.  The reason I’m bringing them forward here is that they’re chock full of wildly fantastic details on the experience of a forward-deployed military anesthesia provider and the principles of trauma anesthesia, which are absolutely relevant today.

Dustin served with the Unites States Air Force from 1998 – 2002 as a critical care Registered Nurse.  He was honorably discharged and went on to complete his anesthesia training outside of the military.  In 2010, he re-enlisted with the Army Reserves as a CRNA and was deployed in November 2012 to Forward Operating Base Orgun-E in Paktika Province, Afghanistan where he was the sole anesthesia provider on a forward surgical team providing damage control resuscitation to injured soldiers.  Most recently, Dustin serves as the chief CRNA at PeaceHealth’s Peace Harbor Medical Center in Florence, Oregon.  In 2021, Dustin was awarded the PeaceHealth Mission & Values award and the organization put together an incredible video tribute to Dustin.  Degman is the real deal… he was the real deal a decade ago when he was serving in Paktika Province, Afghanistan, which he talks about in these next 3 episodes and he’s still the real deal as he serves as a CRNA with Peace Harbor Medical Center out on the coast of Oregon.

I think you’re going to really enjoy hearing from Dustin on combat trauma anesthesia and with that, let’s get to the show!

To close each of these 3 episodes out, I’d like to encourage you to make a donation to the Pat Tillman Foundation in honor of Army Ranger Pat Tillman who was killed in Afghanistan in 2004.  The Pat Tillman Foundation awards academic scholarships to military service members, veterans and their spouses.  Dustin Degman identified this as one of the several service organizations that he believes in and encourages you to give to either the Pat Tillman Foundation or an organization you connect with.  If we each give $10-20, our collective impacts will make a huge difference.

Resources:

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Airway Case Studies Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#44 – Clinical Flow: from OR set up through intubation with Ashley Scheil, BSN, SRNA

In this episode, Ashley and I talk through how to set up an operating room anesthesia workstation, perform a preoperative patient assessment and progress through an IV induction and intubation.

You’ll hear Ashley walk you through everything from how to do a quick machine set up, where to put your tape, how to introduce yourself to patients & work through a preop assessment and how to proceed from getting in the door of the OR through getting the tube where you want it to go after induction. This is a great podcast to help SRNAs and other anesthesia learners to get their clinical flow down!

Ashley Scheil earned her BSN from Purdue University in 2012. She worked as a critical care Registered Nurse in the surgical ICU at the Roudebush VA Medical Center in Indianapolis for 6 years before going back to anesthesia school to earn her DNP at Marian University in May of 2020. Dr Scheil, DNP, CRNA practices at IU Health Arnett Hospital as of September 2021.

Resources

Butterworth, J. F., Mackey, D. C., & Wasnick, J. D. (2018). Morgan and Mikhail’s clinical anesthesiology. McGraw-Hill Education.

Miller, R. D. (2014). Miller’s anesthesia. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier. 

Nagelhout, J. J., Elisha, S., & Plaus, K. (2017). Nurse anesthesia. Elsevier Health Sciences.

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Airway Case Studies Clinical Tips Leadership in Emergencies Obstetrics

#28 Can’t Intubate, Can’t Oxygenate (CICO) during stat C-section: a case study with Eric Carlson, CRNA

This podcast was originally published on March 1, 2015.

In this episode Kristin Lowrance, MSN, CRNA talks with Eric Carlson, CRNA about a case where he was called for a stat Cesarean section and after a rapid sequence induction, he could not intubate or oxygenate the patient. The case was at 2AM and Eric was the only anesthesia provider in house. The other on-call anesthesia provider was at least 20-minutes away. Eric walks us through what happened next and how they proceeded with the decision to simultaneously rescue the baby and perform an emergency percutaneous cricothyrotomy, followed by surgical cricothyrotomy.

Kristin and Eric talk about the decision making and challenges involved in this case and advice for other anesthesia providers when it comes to emergency airway management. It’s a harrowing story that had lasting impacts on everyone involved in the case. It’s a story of leadership in emergencies, profoundly difficult decision making and an example of why we should train for failed airways in our day-to-day, week-to-week work lives: we have to be ready when disaster strikes.

I recently caught back up with Eric following his retirement from anesthesia. In episode 29 of Anesthesia Guidebook, the podcast that follows this one, Eric reflects back on both this case and the impact that telling this story had on his own life and career. We will also talk about retirement, take a look back over his career and hit on advice he would give to anesthesia providers who are still in the thick of it. Be sure to check the next episode out to hear more from Eric!

Below are links to key resources for difficult airway management.

The Vortex Approach – real-time airway crisis cognitive aids.

Chrimes, N., Bradley, W. P. L., Gatward, J. J., & Weatherall, A. D. (2019). Human factors and the ‘next generation’airway trolley. https://doi.org/10.1111/anae.14543

Difficult Airway Society

American Society of Anesthesiologist’s Difficult Airway Guidelines

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Airway Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#10 – 10 Quick Tips for Learning Airway Management

This is a distillation of 10 key tips to help folks who are learning airway management improve their skills. This show gets straight to the point: 10 tips for airway management in 10 minutes.

10 Tips for Airway Management

1. Develop a growth mindset and practice deliberately

2. Do a good airway assessment

3. Develop and follow a plan

4. Control your environment

5. Position the patient and yourself for success

6. Preoxygenate adequately

7. Communicate effectively

8. Choose meds appropriately and let them work

9. Take your time with laryngoscopy

10. Recognize when you need to change your plan and do so deliberately

Chong, J. (2016).  Airway management in obese patients.  EMNote.  Retrieved from http://www.emnote.org/emnotes/airway-management-in-obese-patients 
This is my personal ramp preference – a stack of blankets wrapped with one blanket (which helps when removing the ramp after intubation) and either a pillow or foam shay on top.

Resources:

Achar, S. K., Pai, A. J., & Shenoy, U. K. (2014). Apneic oxygenation during simulated prolonged difficult laryngoscopy: comparison of nasal prongs versus nasopharyngeal catheter: a prospective randomized controlled study. Anesthesia, essays and researches, 8(1), 63.

Booth, A. W. G., Vidhani, K., Lee, P. K., & Thomsett, C. M. (2017). SponTaneous Respiration using IntraVEnous anaesthesia and Hi-flow nasal oxygen (STRIVE Hi) maintains oxygenation and airway patency during management of the obstructed airway: an observational study. BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia118(3), 444-451

Caputo, N., Azan, B., Domingues, R., Donner, L., Fenig, M., Fields, D., … & McCarty, M. (2017). Emergency Department use of Apneic Oxygenation versus usual care during rapid sequence intubation: A randomized controlled trial (The ENDAO Trial). Academic Emergency Medicine24(11), 1387-1394.

Chong, J. (2016).  Airway management in obese patients.  EMNote.  Retrieved from http://www.emnote.org/emnotes/airway-management-in-obese-patients 

Dearani, J. A., Gold, M., Leibovich, B. C., Ericsson, K. A., Khabbaz, K. R., Foley, T. A., … & Daly, R. C. (2017). The role of imaging, deliberate practice, structure, and improvisation in approaching surgical perfection. The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery154(4), 1329-1336.

Ericsson, K. A. (2015). Acquisition and Maintenance of Medical Expertise: A Perspective From the Expert – Performance Approach With Deliberate Practice. Academic Medicine90(11), 1471. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000000939

Ericsson, A., & Pool, R. (2016). Peak: Secrets from the new science of expertise. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Ericsson, K. A. (2004). Deliberate practice and the acquisition and maintenance of expert performance in medicine and related domains. Academic medicine79(10), S70-S81.

e Silva, L. O. J., Cabrera, D., Barrionuevo, P., Johnson, R. L., Erwin, P. J., Murad, M. H., & Bellolio, M. F. (2017). Effectiveness of apneic oxygenation during intubation: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of emergency medicine70(4), 483-494. 

Heard, A., Toner, A. J., Evans, J. R., Palacios, A. M. A., & Lauer, S. (2017). Apneic oxygenation during prolonged laryngoscopy in obese patients: a randomized, controlled trial of buccal RAE tube oxygen administration. Anesthesia & Analgesia, 124(4), 1162-1167.

Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Lee, P. K., Booth, A. W. G., Vidhani, K., & Bath, J. M. (2017). Spontaneous Breathing For the Difficult Airway: STRIVE Hi Demonstrates Its Versatility. Anesthesiology News.

Moulton, C. E., Regehr, G., Mylopoulos, M., & MacRae, H. M. (2007). Slowing down when you should: a new model of expert judgment. Academic Medicine: Journal Of The Association Of American Medical Colleges82(10 Suppl), S109-S116.

Myatra, S. N., Kalkundre, R. S., & Divatia, J. V. (2017). Optimizing education in difficult airway management: meeting the challenge. Current Opinion in Anesthesiology30(6), 748-754.

Nørskov, A. K., Rosenstock, C. V., Wetterslev, J., Astrup, G., Afshari, A., & Lundstrøm, L. H. (2015). Diagnostic accuracy of anaesthesiologists’ prediction of difficult airway management in daily clinical practice: a cohort study of 188 064 patients registered in the Danish Anaesthesia Database. Anaesthesia70(3), 272-281. [THIS IS THE STUDY SHOWING 93% OF DIFFICULT INTUBATIONS AND 94% OF DIFFICULT MASK VENTILATION CASES WERE NOT ANTICIPATED.] 

Patel, A., & Nouraei, S. A. R. (2015). Transnasal Humidified Rapid‐Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange (THRIVE): a physiological method of increasing apnoea time in patients with difficult airways. Anaesthesia70(3), 323-329.

Patel, A., & Nouraei, S. A. R. (2016) Nasal ventilation: oxygenation, no desat, and thrive.  Anesthesiology News.  Retrieved from http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/Review-Articles/Article/08-16/Nasal-Ventilation-Oxygenation-NO-DESAT-and-THRIVE/37294/ses=ogst

Pratt, M. (2017). A Practical Approach to Apneic Oxygenation during Endotracheal Intubation. J Anesth Clin Res8(696), 2.

Pratt, M., & Miller, A. B. (2016). Apneic Oxygenation: A Method to Prolong the Period of Safe Apnea. AANA Journal, 84(5), 322-328.

Ramachandran, S. K., Cosnowski, A., Shanks, A., & Turner, C. R. (2010). Apneic oxygenation during prolonged laryngoscopy in obese patients: a randomized, controlled trial of nasal oxygen administration. Journal of clinical anesthesia, 22(3), 164-168.

Weingart, S. D., & Levitan, R. M. (2012). Preoxygenation and prevention of desaturation during emergency airway management. Annals of emergency medicine59(3), 165-175.