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Time to adequate preoxygenation when using flush rate oxygen
by
Pearson, Andrew M.
, Macomber, Ian W.
, Driver, Brian E.
, Prekker, Matthew E.
, Bunting, Alec J.
, Robinson, Aaron E.
, Jones, Gregg A.
in
Adult
/ Airway
/ Airway management
/ Airway Management - methods
/ Anesthesia
/ Critical care
/ Emergency
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital
/ End tidal oxygen
/ Female
/ Healthy Volunteers
/ Humans
/ Intubation
/ Male
/ Masks
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen - administration & dosage
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - instrumentation
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - methods
/ Oxygen Saturation
/ Patients
/ Preoxygenation
/ Resusitation
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2025
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Time to adequate preoxygenation when using flush rate oxygen
by
Pearson, Andrew M.
, Macomber, Ian W.
, Driver, Brian E.
, Prekker, Matthew E.
, Bunting, Alec J.
, Robinson, Aaron E.
, Jones, Gregg A.
in
Adult
/ Airway
/ Airway management
/ Airway Management - methods
/ Anesthesia
/ Critical care
/ Emergency
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital
/ End tidal oxygen
/ Female
/ Healthy Volunteers
/ Humans
/ Intubation
/ Male
/ Masks
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen - administration & dosage
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - instrumentation
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - methods
/ Oxygen Saturation
/ Patients
/ Preoxygenation
/ Resusitation
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2025
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Time to adequate preoxygenation when using flush rate oxygen
by
Pearson, Andrew M.
, Macomber, Ian W.
, Driver, Brian E.
, Prekker, Matthew E.
, Bunting, Alec J.
, Robinson, Aaron E.
, Jones, Gregg A.
in
Adult
/ Airway
/ Airway management
/ Airway Management - methods
/ Anesthesia
/ Critical care
/ Emergency
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital
/ End tidal oxygen
/ Female
/ Healthy Volunteers
/ Humans
/ Intubation
/ Male
/ Masks
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen - administration & dosage
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - instrumentation
/ Oxygen Inhalation Therapy - methods
/ Oxygen Saturation
/ Patients
/ Preoxygenation
/ Resusitation
/ Time Factors
/ Young Adult
2025
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Time to adequate preoxygenation when using flush rate oxygen
Journal Article
Time to adequate preoxygenation when using flush rate oxygen
2025
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Overview
Preoxygenation utilizing a non-rebreather mask (NRB) to deliver oxygen at the maximal flow rate (>50 L/min) from a standard hospital gas flowmeter (i.e., the flush rate) is an accepted technique during emergency airway management. Existing guidance to preoxygenate patients for at least 3 min is based on use of oxygen-delivery devices not commonly used in the emergency department (e.g., a closed anesthesia circuit). We sought to determine the median length of time needed to achieve adequate preoxygenation utilizing an NRB with flush rate oxygen.
Healthy volunteers performing tidal breathing underwent a 5-min trial of preoxygenation with NRB mask with flush rate oxygen. End-tidal oxygen (EtO2), a measure of the degree of adequate preoxygenation, was recorded every 15 s. Adequate preoxygenation was defined as EtO2 ≥ 85 %.
We enrolled 50 participants. The median maximum EtO2 achieved during preoxygenation was 87 % (interquartile range [IQR] 87–89 %) and all participants achieved an EtO2 > 80 %. The median time to reach an EtO2 of 85 % was 90 s (IQR 60–135 s). By 3 min, 86 % (95 % CI 73 % to 94 %) of participants had achieved adequate preoxygenation.
In healthy participants undergoing preoxygenation with an NRB mask with flush rate oxygen, the median time to adequate preoxygenation was 90 s and 86 % were adequately preoxygenated at 3 min. This suggests that 3 min of preoxygenation is a reasonable target using this technique.
Publisher
Elsevier Inc,Elsevier Limited
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