4.6 Article

Cadaveric emergency cricothyrotomy training for non-surgeons using a bronchoscopy-enhanced curriculum

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0282403

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and potential benefits of bronchoscopy-enhanced cricothyrotomy training on cadavers. The results showed that this training method was helpful and efficient for trainees, and it could detect technical errors that might be missed in standard training programs.
BackgroundEmergency cricothyrotomy training for non-surgeons is important as rare cannot intubate or oxygenate events may occur multiple times in a provider's career when surgical expertise is not immediately available. However, such training is highly variable and often infrequent, therefore, enhancing these experiences is important. Research questionIs bronchoscopy-enhanced cricothyrotomy training in cadavers feasible, and what are the potential benefits provided by this innovation for trainees? MethodsThis study was performed during implementation of a new program to train non-surgeon providers on cadaveric donors on our campus. Standard training with an instructional video and live coaching was enhanced by bronchoscopic visualization of the trachea allowing participants to review their technique after performing scalpel and Seldinger-technique procedures, and to review their colleagues' technique on live video. Feasibility was measured through assessing helpfulness for trainees, cost, setup time, quality of images, and operator needs. Footage from the bronchoscopy recordings was analyzed to assess puncture-to-tube time, safety errors, and evidence for a training effect within groups. Participants submitted pre- and post-session surveys assessing their levels of experience and gauging their confidence and anxiety with cricothyrotomies. ResultsThe training program met feasibility criteria for low costs (<200 USD/donor), setup time (<30 minutes/donor), and operator needs (1/donor). Furthermore, all participants rated the cadaveric session as helpful. Participants demonstrated efficient technique, with a median puncture-to-tube time of 48.5 seconds. Bronchoscopy recordings from 24 analyzed videos revealed eight instances of sharp instruments puncturing the posterior tracheal wall (33% rate), and two instances of improper tube placement (8% rate). Sharp instruments reached potentially dangerous insertion depths beyond the midpoint of the anterior-posterior diameter of the trachea in 58.3% of videos. Bronchoscopic enhancement was rated as quite or extremely helpful for visualizing the trachea (83.3%) and to assess depth of instrumentation (91.7%). There was a significant average increase in confidence (64.4%, P<0.001) and average decrease in performance anxiety (-11.6%, P = 0.0328) after the session. A training effect was seem wherein the last trainee in each group had no posterior tracheal wall injuries. InterpretationSupplementing cadaveric emergent cricothyrotomy training programs with tracheal bronchoscopy is feasible, helpful to trainees, and meets prior documented times for efficient technique. Furthermore, it was successful in detecting technical errors that would have been missed in a standard training program. Bronchoscopic enhancement is a valuable addition to cricothyrotomy cadaveric training programs and may help avoid real-life complications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available