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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Towarzystwo Pomocy Doraźnej
2020-10-01
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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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