vox index

VOX Index: Predicting HFNC Failure (One-Minute Journal Club)

This is a one-minute journal club.This is not medical advice. Read the full free article for yourself (link below).Hat tip to the authors.Link in my stories for the next 24 hours.How do you predict whether a patient on high-flow will need to be intubated?Eyeballing your patient is not quite good enough.The ROX index is a …

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ROX Index: Predicting Who Is or Isn’t Going to Fly on HFNC

We have all had this patient. Someone who is in acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, let's just call it pneumonia of some sort or ARDS, and the regular nasal cannula or a venti-mask can't cut it. They're not at the severity where you can eyeball the patient and just know that they need to be intubated. …

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Pre-oxygenation: High flow nasal cannula vs. BVM

A sentinel event is one where, amongst other different outcomes, leads to death. In critical care, anesthesia, and emergency medicine, we often deal with emergent airways on patients who are on the brink of death unless we intervene expediently. Despite having performed many intubations in my young career, I have the utmost respect for every …

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High Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC): Does it Ventilate COPD Patients?

I've reviewed numerous mechanisms of action and functions of High Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) but I haven't touch on whether or not it works to help ventilate patients. I have discussed in the mechanisms of action that it does wash out the CO2 from the dead space in the nasopharynx, oropharynx, etc, but does that …

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High Flow Nasal Cannula in Acute Decompensated Heart Failure

Fortunately in the critical ill population, we do not necessarily have to abide by the saying that "if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail". What I'm referring to is regarding utilizing high-flow nasal cannula in acute heart failure exacerbations. I already dissected how HFNC generated a "PEEP" equivalent airway pressure …

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High Flow Nasal Cannula in the Emergency Department: Avoid Intubations

This study was the first randomized control trial looking at whether high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) decreases the need for mechanical ventilation in the emergency department. In addition they looked at emergency department and hospital lengths of stays, 90 day mortality, adverse effects in the hospital, and patient experience. I sympathize for the authors of this …

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