Documents procedural indications, consent, technique, and complications for ED procedures. Use when performing emergency procedures, documenting procedural notes, or recording bedside procedures.
Documents procedural indications, informed consent, technical execution, and complication management for critical emergency department procedures including chest tube insertion, central venous access, endotracheal intubation, procedural sedation, and bedside ultrasonography.
Emergency procedures are performed under time pressure on undifferentiated patients with limited history, often without the controlled conditions of an operating room or interventional suite. The procedural complication rate in the ED is directly correlated with documentation quality, pre-procedure planning, and structured post-procedure assessment. A chest tube placed without confirming the indication can cause organ injury. A central line inserted without ultrasound guidance doubles the mechanical complication rate. An intubation without a backup airway plan converts a manageable situation into a fatal one.
This skill structures the pre-procedure assessment, procedural technique documentation, and post-procedure verification for the highest-stakes ED procedures, ensuring that every critical step is performed and recorded even under time pressure.
| Component | Action |
|---|---|
| S — Suction | Yankauer suction at head of bed, tested and functioning |
| O — Oxygen | Pre-oxygenation ≥ 3 minutes or 8 vital-capacity breaths with 100% O₂; nasal cannula at 15 LPM during apneic period |
| A — Airway equipment | Laryngoscope (video AND direct available), ETT (primary size + 0.5 smaller), stylet, bougie, supraglottic airway (LMA), cricothyrotomy kit |
| P — Pharmacy | RSI medications drawn up and labeled: induction agent + paralytic; push-dose pressor; post-intubation sedation/analgesia |
| M — Monitors | Continuous SpO₂, waveform capnography, cardiac monitor, NIBP |
| E — End-tidal CO₂ | Waveform capnography MUST be available for confirmation of tube placement |
| Induction Agent | Dose | Onset | Duration | Best For | Avoid When |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Etomidate | 0.3 mg/kg IV | 30–60 sec | 3–5 min | Hemodynamically unstable patients | Sepsis (theoretical adrenal suppression; debated) |
| Ketamine | 1.5–2 mg/kg IV | 30–60 sec | 10–15 min | Asthma, hypotension, head injury (no longer contraindicated) | Schizophrenia (relative) |
| Propofol | 1–2 mg/kg IV | 15–45 sec | 5–10 min | Status epilepticus, controlled hemodynamics | Hypotension, shock |
| Midazolam | 0.1–0.3 mg/kg IV | 60–90 sec | 15–30 min | Availability when others unavailable | Hemodynamically unstable |
| Paralytic | Dose | Onset | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Succinylcholine | 1.5 mg/kg IV | 45–60 sec | 6–10 min | Fastest onset; contraindicated in hyperkalemia, burns > 48h, denervation injury, malignant hyperthermia |
| Rocuronium | 1.2 mg/kg IV | 60–90 sec | 40–60 min | Reversible with sugammadex 16 mg/kg; preferred when succinylcholine contraindicated |
| Site | Advantages | Disadvantages | Preferred When |
|---|---|---|---|
| Internal jugular (IJ) | Compressible, ultrasound-guided; lower PTX risk than subclavian | Difficult in cervical collar; risk of carotid puncture | Default first choice; coagulopathic patients |
| Subclavian | Lower infection rate; comfortable for patient; good flow rates | Non-compressible; highest PTX risk; difficult to ultrasound | Expected prolonged access; non-coagulopathic |
| Femoral | No PTX risk; easy landmark access | Higher infection rate; DVT risk; limits ambulation | Cardiac arrest; coagulopathy; when IJ/SC impossible |
| Indication | Urgency | Tube Size (Adult) |
|---|---|---|
| Tension pneumothorax (after needle decompression) | Emergent | 28–32 Fr |
| Traumatic hemothorax | Urgent | 32–36 Fr |
| Large spontaneous pneumothorax (> 2 cm apex, symptomatic) | Urgent | 20–28 Fr (small-bore pigtail acceptable for simple PTX) |
| Empyema/complicated parapneumonic effusion | Semi-urgent | 28–32 Fr |
| Massive pleural effusion with respiratory compromise | Semi-urgent | 28–32 Fr |
| Finding | Significance | Action |
|---|---|---|
| > 1500 mL blood immediate output | Massive hemothorax | Consult surgery for thoracotomy |
| > 200 mL/hr blood for 2–4 hours | Ongoing hemorrhage | Consult surgery |
| Continuous air leak | Persistent air leak / bronchopleural fistula | Consult surgery if no resolution in 48–72 hours |
| Abrupt cessation of output | Tube clot, kink, or malposition | Strip tube, check position on CXR |
| Agent | Dose | Onset | Recovery | Best For | Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ketamine | 1–2 mg/kg IV; 4–5 mg/kg IM | IV: 1 min; IM: 5 min | 15–30 min (IV); 60–90 min (IM) | Children, fracture reduction, painful procedures | Age < 3 months; psychosis |
| Propofol | 0.5–1 mg/kg IV, titrate 0.5 mg/kg q30sec | 30 sec | 5–10 min | Short procedures, cardioversion, joint reduction | Hypotension, hemodynamic instability |
| Etomidate | 0.1–0.15 mg/kg IV | 30–60 sec | 5–15 min | Brief procedures, hemodynamically unstable | Myoclonus may complicate procedure |
| Ketofol | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg + Propofol 0.5 mg/kg | 30–60 sec | 10–15 min | Balanced hemodynamics and analgesia | Same as individual agents |
| # | Criterion | Pass / Fail |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Indication for procedure clearly documented with supporting evidence | |
| 2 | Informed consent obtained or emergency exception documented | |
| 3 | Time-out / procedural pause performed before invasive procedure | |
| 4 | Sterile technique used and documented for central lines and chest tubes | |
| 5 | Ultrasound guidance used for central venous access (IJ and femoral) | |
| 6 | Waveform capnography used to confirm ETT placement | |
| 7 | RSI medications, doses, and times documented | |
| 8 | Post-intubation sedation/analgesia initiated and documented | |
| 9 | Post-procedure imaging obtained and interpreted | |
| 10 | Complications documented or explicitly stated as absent | |
| 11 | Number of attempts documented for all access procedures | |
| 12 | Procedure note completed within 1 hour of procedure | |
| 13 | Supervising physician documented for trainee-performed procedures | |
| 14 | Chest tube output monitored with surgical consultation thresholds applied |