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 Technologies

Rapid sequence intubation (RSI) support.

From preoxygenation to intubation

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Straight to the airway. RSI support without the stress

When seconds matter, confidence matters even more. The HAMILTON-EM7 is designed to support emergency medical teams during every phase of rapid sequence intubation (RSI) — from noninvasive preoxygenation to invasive mechanical ventilation.

RSI is a high-risk, high-reward procedure (Hayes-Bradley C, McCreery M, Delorenzo A, Bendall J, Lewis A, Bowles KA. Predictive and protective factors for failing first pass intubation in prehospital rapid sequence intubation: an aetiology and risk systematic review with meta-analysis. Br J Anaesth. 2024;132(5):918-935. doi:10.1016/j.bja.2024.02.0041​). The HAMILTON-EM7 potentially reduces complexity and supports you with an inbuilt RSI workflow that automates key steps and minimizes delays (Hayes-Bradley C, McCreery M, Delorenzo A, Bendall J, Lewis A, Bowles KA. Predictive and protective factors for failing first pass intubation in prehospital rapid sequence intubation: an aetiology and risk systematic review with meta-analysis. Br J Anaesth. 2024;132(5):918-935. doi:10.1016/j.bja.2024.02.0041​).

The benefits of RSI in prehospital care

Availability

RSI is available as a standard feature on all HAMILTON-EM7 devices.

Predictive and protective factors for failing first pass intubation in prehospital rapid sequence intubation: an aetiology and risk systematic review with meta-analysis.

Hayes-Bradley C, McCreery M, Delorenzo A, Bendall J, Lewis A, Bowles KA. Predictive and protective factors for failing first pass intubation in prehospital rapid sequence intubation: an aetiology and risk systematic review with meta-analysis. Br J Anaesth. 2024;132(5):918-935. doi:10.1016/j.bja.2024.02.004

BACKGROUND Prehospital rapid sequence intubation first pass success rates vary between 59% and 98%. Patient morbidity is associated with repeat intubation attempts. Understanding what influences first pass success can guide improvements in practice. We performed an aetiology and risk systematic review to answer the research question 'what factors are associated with success or failure at first attempt laryngoscopy in prehospital rapid sequence intubation?'. METHODS MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Cochrane Library were searched on March 3, 2023 for studies examining first pass success rates for rapid sequence intubation of prehospital live patients. Screening was performed via Covidence, and data synthesised by meta-analysis. The review was registered with PROSPERO and performed and reported as per Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. RESULTS Reasonable evidence was discovered for predictive and protective factors for failure of first pass intubation. Predictive factors included age younger than 1 yr, the presence of blood or fluid in the airway, restricted jaw or neck movement, trauma patients, nighttime procedures, chronic or acute distortions of normal face/upper airway anatomy, and equipment issues. Protective factors included an experienced intubator, adequate training, use of certain videolaryngoscopes, elevating the patient on a stretcher in an inclined position, use of a bougie, and laryngeal manoeuvres. CONCLUSIONS Managing bloody airways, positioning well, using videolaryngoscopes with bougies, and appropriate training should be further explored as opportunities for prehospital services to increase first pass success. Heterogeneity of studies limits stronger conclusions. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW PROTOCOL PROSPERO (CRD42022353609).