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ORIGINAL ARTICLE |
1 Senior Staff Specialist, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Adelaide Hospital and University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia
2 Professor and Head, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, University of Adelaide and Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia
3 Senior Staff Specialist, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, The Townsville Hospital, Douglas, Queensland, Australia
4 Professor, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, University of Adelaide and Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia
Correspondence to:
Professor W B Runciman
President, Australian Patient Safety Foundation, GPO Box 400, Adelaide, South Australia 5001, Australia; research{at}apsf.net.au
11 January 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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Objectives: To examine the role of a previously described "core" algorithm COVER ABCDA SWIFT CHECK, supplemented by a specific sub-algorithm for desaturation, in the management of incidents of desaturation occurring in association with anaesthesia.
Methods: The potential performance of this structured approach for each of the relevant incidents among the first 4000 reported to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study (AIMS) was compared with the actual management as reported by the anaesthetists involved.
Results: Amongst the first 4000 incidents reported to AIMS there were 584 episodes of desaturation in association with general anaesthesia; 41% were dealt with by COVER, 48% by ABCD, and 11% required a specific desaturation sub-algorithm. Nearly a fifth of all desaturations were caused by endobronchial intubation. Within the specific desaturation subgroup, half were due to pulmonary problems in the form of underlying lung disease, excessive secretions or obesity and a third could not be diagnosed.
Conclusion: Desaturation may have many causes, some of which are obscure, and failure to respond promptly may place the patient at risk. In the face of persistent desaturation, management should consist of hand ventilation with 100% oxygen, completion of COVER ABCDA SWIFT CHECK, and a return to a supine posture. Blood gases, chest radiography, and bronchoscopy may be required where desaturation is persistent and/or no apparent causes can be found.
Keywords: desaturation; endobronchial intubation; oesophageal intubation; anaesthesia complications; crisis management
The introduction of pulse oximetry into general use in the perioperative setting revealed the occurrence of desaturation, in varying degrees, more commonly than was expected. Desaturation may be present preoperatively due to pre-existing illness, airway compromise, or the effects of premedication drugs. It may occur in relation to anaesthesia from a myriad of causessome rare and obscure, but nearly all potentially life threatening1and has been shown to be a significant problem in the postoperative period for several days. The degree and duration of desaturation that mandates treatment has not been clearly defined and is, to some extent, dependent on the context in which it occurs. Is a long period of mild desaturation more acceptable than a short period of severe desaturation?
Within the context of anaesthesia, the oximeter is used to provide both an absolute measure and a trend, and provides rapid warning of a decline in oxygenation. In clinical situations such as laryngospasm or difficult intubation, oximetry provides an invaluable measure of the adequacy of ventilation. In other situations such as endobronchial intubation or intrapulmonary shunt, the oximeter provides the first warning of a problem. The occurrence of desaturation needs to be interpreted in the light of the prevailing clinical situation and a cause rapidly found.
In 1993 a "core" crisis management algorithm, represented by the mnemonic COVER ABCDA SWIFT CHECK (the AB precedes COVER for the non-intubated patient), was proposed as the basis for a systematic approach to any crisis during anaesthesia where it is not immediately obvious what should be done or where actions taken have failed to remedy the situation.2 This was validated against the first 2000 incidents reported to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study (AIMS). AIMS is an ongoing study which involves the voluntary anonymous reporting of any unintended incident which reduced or could have reduced the safety margin for a patient.3
It was concluded that, if this algorithm had been correctly applied, a functional diagnosis would have been reached within 4060 seconds in 99% of applicable incidents, and the learned sequence of actions recommended by the COVER portion would have led to appropriate steps being taken to handle the 60% of problems relevant to this portion of the algorithm.1 However, this study also showed that the 40% of problems represented by the remainder of the algorithm ABCDA SWIFT CHECK were not always promptly diagnosed or appropriately managed.13 It was decided that it would be useful, for these remaining problems, to develop a set of sub-algorithms in an easy-to-use crisis management manual.4 This study reports on the potential place of the COVER ABCDA SWIFT CHECK algorithm in the diagnosis and initial management of desaturation, provides an outline of a specific crisis management algorithm for this problem, and provides an indication of the potential value of using this structured approach.
| METHODS |
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| RESULTS |
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The COVER algorithm
The COVER algorithm adequately diagnosed 237 of the 584 incidents (41%). The distribution of these figures is shown in fig 1
. Two incidents were diagnosed by cardiac arrest (C1) and 10 were diagnosed at O (five involved the delivery of hypoxic gas mixtures, four involved preoxygenation or mask ventilation with no gas flow, and one was a common gas outlet disconnection). Over 90% of the COVER incidents were diagnosed at V1 or E1. Most of these would have been detected at the "CHECK" phasethat is, during ventilation by hand and/or checking the position and patency of the endotracheal tube. Most of the V1 incidents involved leaks and disconnects. Common gas outlet disconnects accounted for many of these due to a failure to reconnect the hoses after a change of circuit. This also implies a failure to check the circuit before use as well as a failure to watch respiratory movements in the rebreathing bag during preoxygenation. Either of these manoeuvres would have immediately drawn attention to the disconnection.
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Eight incidents were resolved when monitors and equipment were reviewed and found to be at fault (R).
ABCD algorithm
A further 281 incidents were dealt with by the ABCD algorithm. Figure 2
shows the distribution of causes among these categories. The majority (193 of 281) came under "A" in the form of laryngospasm, aspiration, or difficult intubation. Most of these situations presented no diagnostic challenge but required a sub-algorithm for further management. There were 34 incidents under "B" due to hypoventilation, bronchospasm, or pulmonary oedema. Hypoventilation was responsible for most of these. Many were due to coughing, straining or breath-holding, some with mask ventilation, some with laryngeal masks, some after intubation, and some after extubation. Half of these arose in intubated patients, with the degree of straining sufficient to prevent adequate ventilation. Some of these patients desaturated profoundly (50%) and needed to be re-anaesthetised to regain control of the situation. These incidents are dealt with by specific sub-algorithms that are covered in other papers in this series.
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Bronchial plugs or excessive secretions can produce a shunt effect which may be unmasked by the abolition of the homeostatic mechanism of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction with the induction of anaesthesia, resulting in marked desaturation. Also included in this category was the case of a child undergoing nephrectomy for a perinephric abscess in whom the sudden deterioration was later explained by the finding that the abscess had extended into the lung and ruptured during surgery, soiling the bronchial tree with copious amounts of purulent fluid.
Underlying lung disease (n = 11)
All of these patients had some lung pathology that was either undiagnosed or underestimated before surgery. For example, a baby with known bronchopulmonary dysplasia and subglottic stenosis was turned on his side for insertion of a spinal with no monitoring in place. When the spinal block was completed and the child turned supine again, he was found to be profoundly cyanosed (SpO2 50%). Care with preoperative evaluation and anaesthetic technique may have averted some of these problems.
"Obesity syndrome" (n = 10)
This refers to the rapid desaturation that may occur when obese patients or those with tightly distended abdomens are anaesthetised. It is exacerbated by spontaneous ventilation and by the lithotomy position. All of the patients in this category were obese and all but two were in the lithotomy position.
Monitor error (n = 5)
There were five incidents in which the reported desaturation was spurious. In one the oximeter showed marked desaturation, both with a finger probe and an ear probe, but a simultaneous blood gas analysis showed a PO2 of 458. A falsely low reading occurred in a patient with polycythaemia and one in a patient who was very cold. The remaining false readings occurred in a patient with tricuspid incompetence in whom the oximeter was sensing a venous pulse, and in a patient with an old arteriovenous fistula.
Cardiovascular (n = 4)
There were four incidents in which desaturation occurred in conjunction with hypotension and arrhythmias. In one of these it was felt that the child may have reversed the flow across his known atrial septal defect, and in another a coarctation of the aorta was diagnosed in the recovery ward.
Suspected embolism (n = 4)
There were four cases in which the most likely diagnosis was an embolism, one of fat and three of gas. In each case a fall in saturation was associated with hypotension and a moderate to severe fall in end-tidal carbon dioxide. One of the cases occurred during hydrogen peroxide irrigation of a freshly curetted frontal lobe abscess cavity, one occurred during a laparoscopic cholecystectomy, and one during a nephro-ureterectomy.
Dont know (n = 21)
Many of these were complex incidents involving already sick patients where the underlying problem was never resolved. In some the information provided by the reporter was inadequate while, in others, no conclusions were possible despite detailed reporting of the incident.
When the potential effectiveness of the structured approach, represented by the COVER ABCDA SWIFT CHECK algorithm and the special sub-algorithm for desaturation (fig 3
), was compared with that of the actual management as documented in each of the 584 relevant reports it was considered that, properly applied, the structured approach would have led to a quicker and/or better resolution of the problem in 16% of the incidents. A further 42% of all incidents required other specific sub-algorithms to manage the problem, such as laryngospasm,5 difficult intubation,6 and aspiration/regurgitation.7
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Within the subgroup of 66 incidents that required the specific desaturation sub-algorithm, it was felt that 15% of these would have been better handled by correct application of the algorithm. In most incidents this referred to failure to clearly work through a logical sequence, ventilate by hand on 100% oxygen, suction the airway, or check blood gases. There was a haphazard approach to finding a cause, an acceptance that desaturation had occurred and the fraction of inspired oxygen increased with no further attempt to elucidate a cause. In 14% it was not possible to determine what the cause of the desaturation was because of inadequate information in the reports. Overall, the majority of incidents in this subgroup were handled well even if the underlying cause could not be found. There were no incidents where use of the desaturation sub-algorithm was thought to have been likely to make the situation worse.
| DISCUSSION |
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Among the first 4000 incidents reported to AIMS there were 706 incidents (17.7%) with the key word "desaturation". This makes desaturation one of the most frequently reported incidents under anaesthesia. For the purposes of this paper, only those incidents that occurred in the context of a general anaesthetic were considered. Incidents which occurred in patients undergoing regional or local anaesthesia, or which occurred before induction or after emergence, were excluded. Thus, there were 584 incidents for analysis.
Most desaturations (52%) occurred during the maintenance phase as shown in table 2
. Those which occurred at induction were largely those where the cause was immediately obvious (for example, laryngospasm, difficult intubation, inadequate ventilation). However, these observations emphasise the importance of preoxygenation.9,10 Similarly, the greater proportion of the emergence desaturation incidents were due to obvious causes such as aspiration, laryngospasm, coughing, and breath holding. Again, 100% oxygen at emergence clearly represents good practice. The much bigger group of incidents occurring during the maintenance phase were from more obscure causes. More than half of these were diagnosed by the COVER algorithm and include a large contribution from endobronchial intubation. Numerous equipment related problems accounted for the rest.
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Key messages
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The widespread availability of pulse oximetry highlights the fact that anaesthetists may not observe cyanosis until there is marked desaturation. Thus, the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists requires that a pulse oximeter be available for the exclusive use of every anaesthetised patient.11 The importance of oximetry is highlighted by the fact that, in half the reported incidents, desaturation was the first warning that all was not well. Table 3
shows the pattern of desaturation as a first or second warning: 80% of the COVER related incidents were heralded by desaturation (table 3
, fig 1
), as were 80% of the specific desaturation sub-algorithm incidents. Even in the anaphylaxis and embolism incidents included in this paper, desaturation was often the first warning, rather than bronchospasm or hypocarbia, as would be expected. The incidents where desaturation was the second presentation were largely those where it was obvious that a problem had occurred, such as laryngospasm, aspiration, or difficult intubation.
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The resulting structured approach to managing clinical desaturation, as appears in the Crisis Management Manual,12 is detailed in fig 3
. Finally, it is important that a full explanation of what happened be given to the patient and the problem clearly documented in the anaesthetic record. If a particular precipitating event was significant or a particular action was useful in resolving the crisis, this should be clearly explained and documented.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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| REFERENCES |
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