Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.

INTRODUCTION: SARS-CoV-2 is a novel strain of coronavirus that has caused illness in over 6 million people worldwide as of June 2020. Patients with severe illness are treated with invasive mechanical ventilation, as such, tracheostomy has become a topic of interest. Traditional schema employed durin...

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Main Authors: Ashish Rai, Anna P. Chang, Steven Soo, Joy Thomas, Judy Ackerman, Brian Mitzman, Michael T. Bender
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Towarzystwo Pomocy Doraźnej 2020-10-01
Series:Critical Care Innovations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.irdim.net/cci/3(3)13-19.html
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spelling doaj-d72d80309ffa4cb19b281d88c21622052020-11-25T03:57:03ZengTowarzystwo Pomocy DoraźnejCritical Care Innovations2545-25332545-25332020-10-0133131910.32114/CCI.2020.3.3.13.19Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.Ashish Raihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9683-0142Anna P. Changhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-0743-5050Steven Soohttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1515-7532 Joy Thomashttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3041-5090Judy Ackermanhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3128-7935Brian Mitzmanhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8129-0067Michael T. Benderhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6674-2101INTRODUCTION: SARS-CoV-2 is a novel strain of coronavirus that has caused illness in over 6 million people worldwide as of June 2020. Patients with severe illness are treated with invasive mechanical ventilation, as such, tracheostomy has become a topic of interest. Traditional schema employed during independent breathing trials in patients with tracheostomies employ the use of a collar mask attached to flexible corrugated tubing with humidified oxygen from a wall source. One drawback of this arrangement is the creation of an open circuit with the potential for viral aerosolization. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We adapted high flow oxygen (HFO) therapy to patient’s tracheostomy tube and devised a rapid decannulation protocol for patients recovering from Covid-19. Corrugated flexible tubing with a heating element is attached to the HFO meter-blender/heated humidifier apparatus and then connected directly to one end of a Y-adapter. An in-line suction kit specified for tracheostomy patients is also placed. Humidified air is delivered to the patient using the heating element of the HFO system obviating the need for a heat moisture exchanger. A second corrugated tube is attached to the free end of the Y-adapter and a non-conductive viral particle filter is attached to its free end to limit viral aerosolization. RESULTS: The mean time to tracheostomy placement is 18 days from initiation of mechanical ventilation (5-39 days). To date 20/52 (38%) patients have undergone tracheostomy tube removal, and of those 13 have been discharged. The mean time to decannulation is 15 days (8-32 days). Three patients failed decannulation requiring repeat endotracheal intubation (5.7%). SARS-CoV-2 was not detected in 22/24 patients undergoing repeat polymerase chain reaction testing on day 45 after initial positive test. CONCLUSIONS: Utilizing HFO to tracheostomy scheme creates a closed circuit theoretically reducing the risk of COVID-19 exposure, while also helping patients breathe independently. This schema coupled with a rapid decannulation protocol is a reasonable alternative in select patients recovering from severe COVID-19.https://www.irdim.net/cci/3(3)13-19.htmlcovid-19high flow oxygen deliverytracheostomydecannulation.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ashish Rai
Anna P. Chang
Steven Soo
Joy Thomas
Judy Ackerman
Brian Mitzman
Michael T. Bender
spellingShingle Ashish Rai
Anna P. Chang
Steven Soo
Joy Thomas
Judy Ackerman
Brian Mitzman
Michael T. Bender
Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
Critical Care Innovations
covid-19
high flow oxygen delivery
tracheostomy
decannulation.
author_facet Ashish Rai
Anna P. Chang
Steven Soo
Joy Thomas
Judy Ackerman
Brian Mitzman
Michael T. Bender
author_sort Ashish Rai
title Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
title_short Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
title_full Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
title_fullStr Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
title_full_unstemmed Novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the COVID-19 patient.
title_sort novel approaches in the post-tracheostomy care of the covid-19 patient.
publisher Towarzystwo Pomocy Doraźnej
series Critical Care Innovations
issn 2545-2533
2545-2533
publishDate 2020-10-01
description INTRODUCTION: SARS-CoV-2 is a novel strain of coronavirus that has caused illness in over 6 million people worldwide as of June 2020. Patients with severe illness are treated with invasive mechanical ventilation, as such, tracheostomy has become a topic of interest. Traditional schema employed during independent breathing trials in patients with tracheostomies employ the use of a collar mask attached to flexible corrugated tubing with humidified oxygen from a wall source. One drawback of this arrangement is the creation of an open circuit with the potential for viral aerosolization. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We adapted high flow oxygen (HFO) therapy to patient’s tracheostomy tube and devised a rapid decannulation protocol for patients recovering from Covid-19. Corrugated flexible tubing with a heating element is attached to the HFO meter-blender/heated humidifier apparatus and then connected directly to one end of a Y-adapter. An in-line suction kit specified for tracheostomy patients is also placed. Humidified air is delivered to the patient using the heating element of the HFO system obviating the need for a heat moisture exchanger. A second corrugated tube is attached to the free end of the Y-adapter and a non-conductive viral particle filter is attached to its free end to limit viral aerosolization. RESULTS: The mean time to tracheostomy placement is 18 days from initiation of mechanical ventilation (5-39 days). To date 20/52 (38%) patients have undergone tracheostomy tube removal, and of those 13 have been discharged. The mean time to decannulation is 15 days (8-32 days). Three patients failed decannulation requiring repeat endotracheal intubation (5.7%). SARS-CoV-2 was not detected in 22/24 patients undergoing repeat polymerase chain reaction testing on day 45 after initial positive test. CONCLUSIONS: Utilizing HFO to tracheostomy scheme creates a closed circuit theoretically reducing the risk of COVID-19 exposure, while also helping patients breathe independently. This schema coupled with a rapid decannulation protocol is a reasonable alternative in select patients recovering from severe COVID-19.
topic covid-19
high flow oxygen delivery
tracheostomy
decannulation.
url https://www.irdim.net/cci/3(3)13-19.html
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