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ORIGINAL ARTICLE |
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Year : 2018 | Volume
: 12
| Issue : 3 | Page : 323-328 |
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Real-time tracheal ultrasonography for confirming endotracheal tube placement
Ahmed E Kabil1, Ahmed M Ewis1, Ahmed M Al-Ashkar2, Mohamed A.A Abdelatif3, Mohamed O Nour4
1 Department of Chest Diseases, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt 2 Department of Internal Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt 3 Department of Radiology, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt 4 Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Damietta; Faculty of Public Health and Health Informatics, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Egypt
Date of Submission | 09-Sep-2017 |
Date of Acceptance | 21-Jan-2018 |
Date of Web Publication | 20-Aug-2018 |
Correspondence Address: Ahmed M Ewis Chest Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo Egypt
Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None | Check |
DOI: 10.4103/ejb.ejb_88_17
Objective To evaluate the accuracy of tracheal ultrasonography for confirming the endotracheal tube placement during patients’ intubation. Patients and methods The current study was a prospective, randomized study performed at the ICU of Al-Hussein Hospital, Cairo. Intubated for respiratory failure, cardiac arrest or other medical causes were included in the current study. Real-time tracheal ultrasonography was conducted during intubation with the ultrasound probe placed transversely over the trachea above the suprasternal notch for confirming the tube position, either tracheal or esophageal. The standard method for confirming endotracheal tube placement include clinical evaluation and rapid bronchoscopic confirmation. The main outcomes were the degree of accuracy and timeliness of tracheal ultrasound in confirming endotracheal tube placement. Results Forty patients eligible for endotracheal intubation were randomized in the current study and only four (10%) patients had confirmed esophageal intubations. Our results concluded that tracheal ultrasound had a diagnostic accuracy of 97.5% in the detection of endotracheal tube site. The sensitivity was 97.2%, while the specificity was 100%. Tracheal ultrasound had a positive predictive value of 100%, while the negative predictive value was 80%. The total operating time of ultrasonography was significantly lower than that of bronchoscopy. Conclusion Real-time ultrasound of the trachea is an accurate, feasible, and fast method in confirming endotracheal tube placement. Keywords: endotracheal intubation, esophageal intubation, tracheal ultrasonography
How to cite this article: Kabil AE, Ewis AM, Al-Ashkar AM, Abdelatif MA, Nour MO. Real-time tracheal ultrasonography for confirming endotracheal tube placement. Egypt J Bronchol 2018;12:323-8 |
Introduction | | |
The process of confirmation of endotracheal tube site may be challenging for the majority of ICU physicians [1],[2].
Sometimes, it may be very difficult to see the glottis, especially with difficult intubation [3]. Physical examination, pulse oximetry, and chest radiography are not reliable as definite methods to detect the endotracheal tube position [4]. Esophageal detection device is unavailable in many places and can be misinterpreted [5]. Capnography is advised as the more trustable tool for the confirmation of endotracheal tube position [6]. On the other hand, capnography may be not widely available and it has many limitations [7],[8]. At least six breaths are required for the stomach to be completely cleared of CO2 [9]. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy is expensive and invasive [10].
Ultrasound is a simple, real-time, and less invasive diagnostic method that is commonly used in the ICU for many other causes [11].
The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance and timeliness of real-time tracheal sonography in confirming endotracheal tube position during patient’s intubation in the ICU.
Patients and methods | | |
The current study was a prospective, observational study, conducted at the respiratory and medical ICUs, Al-Hussein University Hospital, over the period from June 2015 to November 2016. A written consent was taken from the relatives of each patient.
Inclusion criteria
The study included patients who underwent endotracheal intubation as a result of respiratory failure, cardiac arrest, or other medical causes at the respiratory or medical ICUs. The patients were included during the times when at least two of the investigators were on duty.
Exclusion criteria
The exclusion criteria were: (a) neck trauma, (b) neck malignancy, (c) neck surgery or tracheostomy, (d) age under 18 years (we conducted this study in the adult respiratory ICU).
For patients with esophageal intubation, the first intubation was only included in the study (the second intubation was endotracheal).
Patients intubation was done by senior ICU residents, under supervision of the attending physicians on duty. Tracheal ultrasound was performed concurrently with intubation by one of the contributing physicians (other than a radiologist), who had completed the airway ultrasound training course. All ultrasound images were saved and revised by a radiologist later. After completing the intubation confirming endotracheal tube position was performed using a rapid fiberoptic bronchoscopy examination of the tube done by another attending chest physician.
A convex ultrasound probe was used for examination. The probe was placed transversely just above the suprasternal notch. The trachea can be detected easily by a hyperechoic air–mucosa (A–M) interface with the radiating artifact shadow posteriorly (comet-tail artifact). During intubation, the endotracheal tube site was immediately detected by ultrasound. The place of intubation was determined by ultrsonography as (a) in the trachea if only a single A–M interface with comet-tail artifact and posterior shadowing was detected or (b) in the esophagus if double A–M interfaces with comet-tail artifacts and posterior shadowing were seen, called a ‘double tract sign’. The operating time required for ultrasound confirmation was recorded. The ultrasound operating time was defined as the period between finishing endotracheal tube placement and completing ultrasound scan to obtain the final decision [12].
The primary outcome was the comparison between tracheal ultrasonography and fiberoptic bronchoscopy for confirming endotracheal tube placement. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy was used as the criterion standard as regards confirming tracheal intubation. The secondary outcome was the total time consumed during tracheal ultrasound for confirming the endotracheal tube position ([Figure 1] and [Figure 2]). | Figure 1 Characteristics of the tracheal ultrasonography for tracheal intubation confirmation.
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Ethical consideration
The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University and a written consent was taken from the first-degree relatives of each patient.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was done using the SPSS computer package, version 19.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA). For descriptive statistics, the mean±SD was used for quantitative variables while the number and percentage were used for qualitative variables. In univariate analyses, the qualitative variables were compared by χ2-test or Fischer’s exact test when appropriate and the quantitative variables were compared by independent samples t-test. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and positive and negative predictive values were calculated for the determination of tube placement. The statistical methods were verified, assuming a significant level of P value of less than 0.05 and a highly significant level of P value of less than 0.001.
Results | | |
Forty patients were included in this study. The history and clinical characteristics of the patients were achieved from the relatives or from the existing hospital files and investigations. Their demographics and clinical features are shown in [Table 1].
Among the studied sample, only four patients had esophageal intubation and 36 patients had tracheal intubation after clinical and fiberoptic bronchoscopy confirmation of the tube position. The demographics and clinical features of both the groups are shown in [Table 2].
The findings of tracheal ultrasonography assessment of tube position are shown in [Table 3]. Ultrasound detected tracheal intubation in 35 patients (97.22% of all patients with true tracheal intubation). Only one patient with tracheal intubation was detected by ultrasound as esophageal (2.78%). All patients with esophageal intubation (n=4) were correctly detected by ultrasound as esophageal intubation. | Table 3 Ultrasonographic detection of tracheal and esophageal intubation
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The diagnostic accuracy of ultrasonographical examination for confirming endotracheal tube placement was 97.5%. The sensitivity and specificity were 97.2 and 100%, respectively. The positive predictive value and the negative predictive value were 100 and 80%, respectively.
The time spent in the procedure of tracheal ultrasonography is recorded in [Table 4], with significant shorter duration than the duration of fiberoptic bronchoscopy. | Table 4 Time required for confirmation of endotracheal tube position (s)
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Discussion | | |
The aim of this study was identification of the accuracy and timeliness of tracheal ultrasonography to confirm the endotracheal tube positioning in respiratory and medical ICU patients. As evidenced by 2010 advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) guidelines, the position of endotracheal tube need to be confirmed clinically and also by using confirmative tool after intubation to avoid the catastrophic effects of esophageal intubation [12]. However, there are some limitations for each confirmation technique. Even when performed by experienced physicians, there is still issue of unreliability as regards the clinical assessment of endotracheal tube position [7]. The most common clinical methods for confirming endotracheal intubation are auscultation of the chest by a stethoscope and detection of chest wall movement and expansion. However, these methods may interfere with chest compressions during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Quantitative waveform capnography has been considered as the gold standard to confirm endotracheal intubation. Nevertheless, waveform capnography requires good ventilation as well as adequate pulmonary vascular flow to give reliable results. It may give false-positive (e.g. nonfasting patient with gastric CO2 production) [13], and false-negative results (e.g. low pulmonary flow, use of epinephrine drugs, technical error, or airway obstruction), during cardiopulmonary resuscitation [7],[8]. Unfortunately, quantitative waveform capnography is not available and is hardly applicable in many places.
In recent surveys of the National Emergency Airway Registry Series, despite the availability of colorimetric end-tidal CO2 probes were in 77% of physicians at their hospitals, only about one-third of them used continuous quantitative capnogram [14]. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy can be used to confirm the correct position of the tube with highly successful, more reliable results. Observation of the rings and bifurcation of the trachea is achieved easily by the bronchoscopist. It may be difficult to see due to misting, secretions, and hemorrhage. The bronchoscope is relatively expensive with liability to be broken. Also, the use of bronchoscopy is not widely available for routine confirmation of the tube position [15]. Thus, it is advisable to use other confirmatory techniques wherein there is no interruption with compression of the thorax during cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
Ultrasound has become widely used and easy with high diagnostic yield in many critical care areas and chest departments. The 2010 European Resuscitation Council Guidelines, in the scope of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation Consensus on Science and Treatment Recommendations, recognized the value of ultrasonography as an adjuvant for the diagnosis and treatment of the possible reversible causes of cardiac arrest [16],[17].
The use of ultrasonography for confirming endotracheal tube placement is advisable due to many causes as it is portable, can be repeated many times, cost-effective, noninvasive, and a painless method.
For confirming endotracheal tube placement, three windows have been used: the first window is tracheal (direct), the second is intercostals (indirect), and the third is subxiphoid, or diaphragmatic (indirect). The indirect ultrasonographic methods use pleural sliding and diaphragmatic movement to assess tracheal intubation [18],[19]; these techniques may interfere with chest compression during CPR and mechanical ventilation of the patient is also required. These techniques may be affected by underlying lung diseases, for example, pneumothorax.
Direct tracheal ultrasound shows the anatomy of the larynx and trachea independent of patient physiology, and it is not affected like capnography by other factors such as low pulmonary flow. Also, this technique of tracheal ultrasound can detect undesired esophageal intubation even before mechanical ventilation of the patient, and this in turn prevents further forced ventilation which introduces a large air volume to the stomach and with subsequent undesirable associated complications.
It is well known that ultrasonography is a technique which is dependent on operator skills and experience; on the other hand, it is relatively easy to learn and to interpret tracheal ultrasound images confirming the intubation. Rosenstein et al. [20] have shown that physicians with low experience are more reliably and easily interpreting transverse views of tracheal ultrasound to confirm endotracheal tube position.
In this study, we used a curved probe which is more available and common to use through the suprasternal notch window. This window was used as it is more accurate in visualizing the trachea and the esophagus and hence the position of the endotracheal tube [21]. Also, we used real-time dynamic assessment during the process of intubation which may appear more accurate and more rapid. In this technique, if the endotracheal tube has been introduced falsely into the esophagus, there was appearance of another hyperechoic A–M interface artifacts with posterolateral shadowing to the trachea [12].
In the current study, real-time tracheal ultrasonography has a high diagnostic accuracy with high sensitivity and specificity for confirming endotracheal tube position during intubation of the patients in respiratory ICU.
These results are in agreement with two prospective studies done by Werner et al. [21] and Milling et al. [22]. They found that tracheal ultrasound achieved up to 100% sensitivity and specificity under ideal settings in the procedure room.
It is also coincides with Karacabey et al. [23], who showed that real-time tracheal ultrasound has high sensitivity and specificity for confirming endotracheal tube position and with faster results than capnography. However, they added ultrasonographic lung sliding sign to the technique to avoid one-lung ventilation with bronchial intubation.
A recent systematic review and meta-analysis which was done by Chou et al. [24] concluded the high efficacy of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of esophageal intubation. Moreover, it can be used as adjunct evidence with high sensitivity and specificity in the assessment of the airway, especially in many units where the capnometry is unavailable and if available may be unreliable.
Our results also had demonstrated that tracheal ultrasound is less time consuming than bronchoscopy in confirming the tube position. This is an important issue in the airway management procedure. In agreement with our results, Karacabey et al. [23] reported that ultrasonography took significantly less time than capnography in confirming endotracheal tube placement.
However, there are some limitations to our study. First, it was a single-center study with a relatively low number of patients, especially those with esophageal intubation. Further multicenters studies with a larger sample of subjects are recommended. The unavailability of capnography in our study appears as another limitation to be considered in other studies.
Conclusion | | |
Ultrasonography is a good, rapid, and feasible method for confirming endotracheal tube placement in RICU with a high degree of sensitivity and specificity and more advantages than other methods.
Acknowledgements
Ahmed E. Kabil, and Ahmed M. Ewis carried out fiberoptic bronchoscopy and tracheal ultrasound. Ahmed M. Al-Ashkar carried out tracheal ultrasound. Mohamed A.A. Abdelatif carried out tracheal ultrasound images. Mohamed O. Nour carried out statistics.
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
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[Figure 1], [Figure 2]
[Table 1], [Table 2], [Table 3], [Table 4]
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