Tracheostomy for Ventilated Patient
Doctors struggle to accurately predict which patients will require prolonged mechanical ventilation. Doctors need a clear understanding of the nature and typical course of chronic critical illness.
Communication about chronic critical illness should begin before its onset and, ideally, as early as the initiation of mechanical ventilation (or even at decision-making about whether to initiate ventilation). Doctors should inform not only of the risk of death in the ICU, but also the chance the patient might survive but remain dependent on the ventilator and other intensive therapies for a prolonged period.
These initial discussions allow a longer time for doctors to “cultivate prognostic awareness” i.e. the capacity to understand prognosis and the likely illness trajectory and help patients and families prepare psychologically and practically for further developments.
Based on the available evidence, routine placement of tracheostomy prior to day 10 of mechanical ventilation is not indicated. General consensus is that a tracheostomy should be placed after day 10 if the patient is likely to require more than a few additional days of ventilation i.e. the patient will neither be liberated from the ventilator nor die in the near future i.e. the patient is chronically critically ill.
Benefits of tracheostomy include:
Improved patient comfort
Easier oral care and suctioning
Reduced need for sedation or analgesia
Reduced accidental extubation
Improved weaning from mechanical ventilation
Easier facilitation of rehabilitation
Earlier communication and oral nutrition
Facilitated transfer to lower level of care
Early Complications:
Bleeding
Air leak causing subcutaneous emphysema, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum
Damage to the swallowing tube (esophagus)
Injury to the nerve of the vocal cords (recurrent laryngeal nerve)
Tracheostomy tube can be blocked by blood clots, mucus, or pressure of the airway walls.
Late Complications:
Accidental removal of the tracheostomy tube
Infection in the trachea and around the tracheostomy tube
Trachea may be damaged by pressure from the tube resulting in bacterial infections and scar tissue formation
Delayed Complications:
Thinning of the trachea from the tube rubbing against it (tracheomalacia)
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