airway 1: rapid sequence intubation stuart swadron, md, frcpc, facep program director

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AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director Residency in Emergency Medicine Keck-USC School of Medicine ept. of Emergency Medicine July

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AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director Residency in Emergency Medicine Keck-USC School of Medicine. LAC+USC Dept. of Emergency Medicine July 19, 2007 . DEFINITIONS. Rapid Sequence Intubation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

AIRWAY 1:RAPID

SEQUENCEINTUBATION

Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEPProgram Director

Residency in Emergency MedicineKeck-USC School of Medicine

LAC+USC Dept. of Emergency Medicine July 19, 2007

Page 2: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

DEFINITIONS

INDUCTION AGENT

PARALYTIC

UNCONSCIOUSNESS

MOTOR PARALYSIS

Rapid Sequence Intubation

Page 3: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

DEFINITIONS

INDUCTION AGENT

Pharmacologically Assisted Intubation

UNCONSCIOUSNESS

Page 4: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

DEFINITIONS

Geneva Convention Violation

PARALYTIC

MOTOR PARALYSIS

Page 5: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

RATIONALE – Principle

Increasedsuccess

Decreasedaspiration

Page 6: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

BetterC-spinecontrol

RATIONALE - Secondary

Page 7: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Blunting↑ ICP / IOP

RATIONALE - Secondary

Page 8: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Avoid airway trauma

RATIONALE - Secondary

Page 9: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Avoid airway trauma

RATIONALE - Secondary

Page 10: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

↓ Pain↓ Discomfort ↓ Recall

Page 11: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Prolongedintubation

HAZARDS

Page 12: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Adverse Drug Events

HAZARDS

Page 13: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

May force crash airway scenario

HAZARDS

Page 14: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

INDICATIONS

Failure OR Imminent failure of :

1. oxygenation2. ventilation3. airway protection or maintenance

Page 15: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

CONTRAINDICATIONS

INDICATIONRISK

Page 16: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 17: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

RSI CAN ALSO BE…

UNNECESSARY

- OR –

INAPPROPRIATE

Page 18: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 19: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 20: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PREPARATIONt – 10 minutes

1. EQUIPMENT PRESENT AND WORKING

MUST INCLUDE EQUIPMENTFOR PLAN “B”

Page 21: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PREPARATIONt – 10 minutes

2. ASK: CAN I…

BAG THE PATIENTTUBE THE PATIENTCRIC THE PATIENT

Page 22: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

L ook at general anatomyE valuate the 3-3-2 ruleM allampati scoreO bstructionN eck mobility

CAN I TUBE THIS PATIENT?

Page 23: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

CAN I BAG THIS PATIENT?

Maybe. Maybe Not.

Page 24: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

CAN I CRIC* THIS PATIENT?

* may include alternative airway techniques

Page 25: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 26: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 27: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 28: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 29: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PREOXYGENATIONt – 5 minutes

1. “PRIMUM NO BAGER!” (First, do not bag!)

2. If you do need to bag, Remember TOM

Page 35: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PREOXYGENATIONt – 5 minutes

1. Well-fitting mask

2. 8 vital capacity breaths

Nimmagadda et al. Anesthesiology 93 (3): 693-698, 2000Baraka et al. Anesthesiology 91 (3): 612, 1999

Page 36: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PREOXYGENATIONt – 5 minutes

Normal adult

Obese adult

Normal child

Ill adult

Page 37: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 38: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 39: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PRETREATMENTt – 3 minutes

L Lidocaine

O Opioids

A Atropine

D Defasciculating Medication

Page 40: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PRETREATMENTt – 3 minutes

“LOAD”

may just be a

LOAD

Page 41: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

LIDOCAINETraditional Indications

Tight Brains“There is currently no evidence to support the use of intravenous lidocaine as a pretreatment for RSI in patients with head injury and its use should only occur in clinical trials”

Robinson N, Clancy, M. Emergency Medicine Journal 18(6):453-7, 2001

Tight Lungs“…no study has demonstrated a protective effect of [both intravenous and topical anesthetic agents] in preventing bronchospasm after intubation..”

Maslow et al. Anesthesiology, 93(5): 1198-1204, 2000

Page 42: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

OPIOIDS (Fentanyl)

Traditional Indications

1. Blunt hemodynamic response

2. Decrease pain

Adachi et al. Anesthesia & Analgesia. 95(1):233-7, 2002

Page 43: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

FENTANYL DOSE

Dose = 3µg/kg* IV slow push

*Beware of hypotension and apnea

Page 44: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

ATROPINEStandard practiceGive atropine to:

1. all children less than 8 years old2. prior to second dose of succinylcholine

Dose = 0.01-0.02 mg/kg IVP

Evidence is mounting that questions routine use of atropine

Fastle et al. Pediatr Emerg Care;20(10):651-5, 2004McAuliffe et al. Can J Anaesth; 43(7) 754-5,1996Fleming et al. CJEM. 2005;7(2):114-7

Page 45: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

DEFASCICULATING DOSEOne tenth the RSI dose

Traditional Indications

1. Blunt rise in ICP2. Decrease risk of aspiration3. Prevent muscular pain

Clancy et al. Emergency Medicine Journal. 18(5):373-5, 2001

Questionable value“no definitive evidence that SCh caused a rise in ICP”“no studies that investigated the issue of pretreatment with defasciculating doses and their effect on ICP”

Page 46: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

And what’s more…

DEFASCICULATING DOSEcan be downright dangerous*

* it may cause premature apnea

Page 47: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PRETREATMENTt – 3 minutes

If you’re going to give these drugs:

…at least give them some time to circulate (3 minutes)

Page 48: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Summary of LOADPRETREATMENT

L idocaine optional

O piates optional

A tropine still mandatory for kids < 8

D efasciculating optional dose

Page 49: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 50: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 51: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

Time “0”INDUCTION AGENTS

Etomidate Thiopental Ketamine Propafol Midazolam

PARALYTIC AGENTS

DEPOLARIZING

Succinylcholine

NON-DEPOLARIZING

Vecuronium Rocuronium

+

Page 52: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

SUX IS STILL KING

…but nondepolarizing agents are gaining ground

Perry et al. Academic Emergency Medicine 9(8): 813-23, 2002

Page 53: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

SUX versus ROC

45 seconds ONSET 1 minute

9 minutes DURATION 45 minutes

1 mg/kg1-2.5 mg/kg

Page 54: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

When Sux Really “Sucks”CONTRAINDICATIONS

1. HYPERKALEMIARENAL FAILURERHABDOMYOLYSIS

2. RECEPTOR UPREGULATIONSUBACUTE BURNS (>1 day)SUBACUTE DENERVATING DISORDERHISTORY OF MALIGNANT HYPERTHERMIA

Page 55: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Advent of the Non-Depolarizing Agents

Pancuronium

Vecuronium

Rocuronium

Rapacuronium –oops!

Page 56: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Making non-depolarizing agents FASTER

1. Large Doses

2. Priming Doses

3. Better Induction Agents

}Increase duration

Page 57: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

The Choice of Induction Agent

ETOMIDATE – the agent of choice

THIOPENTAL – hypotension– not the greatest intubating conditions

PROPAFOL – hypotension– storage, allergy concerns

KETAMINE – not the greatest intubating conditions– some like it for asthma – good for penetrating neck trauma

MIDAZOLAM – effective induction doses cause hypotension– usually underdosed (requires 0.3mg/kg)– better for conscious sedation

Page 58: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 59: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 60: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING t + 20 seconds

Page 61: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

C Spine Precautions

Page 62: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 63: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 64: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PLACEMENT AND PROOF t + 45 seconds

Over here,

Socrates !!!

Page 65: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 66: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 67: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 68: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 69: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT t + 90 seconds

THE “APRÈS INTUBATION”

CONFIRM INTUBATION

SECURE TUBE

CHECK CHEST X-RAY, ABG’S

Page 70: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

CONFIRMING INTUBATION

Page 71: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 72: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 73: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

SECURING TUBE

Page 74: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 75: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 76: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director
Page 77: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

THE 7 P’s OF RSIPREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION

PRETREATMENT

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

TIME ZERO

t – 10 minutes

t + 90 seconds

Page 78: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

Page 79: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

TRAUMA WITH HEAD INJURYPREPARATIONPREOXYGENATION WITH 100% O2 (t -5min)PRETREATMENT (t -3min)

Lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg IVP (Optional - if time allows)Vecuronium 0.01 mg/kg IVP (Optional - if time / resp status allows)Fentanyl 3 μg/kg IVP (Optional - if time / BP allows)

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION (t = 0)Etomidate 0.3 mg/kgSuccinylcholine 1.5 mg/kg

PROTECTION AND POSITIONINGPLACEMENT AND PROOF (t +45

sec)with in-line C-spine stabilization

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

Page 80: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

STATUS ASTHMATICUSPREPARATIONPREOXYGENATION WITH 100% O2 (t -5min)PRETREATMENT (t -3min)

Lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg IVP (Optional - if time allows)

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION (t = 0)Ketamine 1.5 mg/kg IVP Succinylcholine 1.5 mg/kg

PROTECTION AND POSITIONINGPLACEMENT AND PROOF (t +45

sec)

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

Page 81: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

ONE SIZE FITS ALL!PREPARATION

PREOXYGENATION WITH 100% O2 (t -5min)

PARALYSIS WITH INDUCTION (t = 0)Etomidate 0.3 mg/kgSuccinylcholine 1.5 mg/kg OR Rocuronium 1mg/kg

PROTECTION AND POSITIONING

PLACEMENT AND PROOF (t +45 sec)

POST-INTUBATION MANAGEMENT

Page 82: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

INTUBATION HURTS!!!

And it keeps on hurting once the tube is in.

Page 83: AIRWAY 1: RAPID SEQUENCE INTUBATION Stuart Swadron, MD, FRCPC, FACEP Program Director

Thank you!