This article is part of the supplement: 29th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Tracheostomy in the ICU: an analysis of 443 procedures
University Hospital La Paz, Madrid, Spain
Critical Care 2009, 13(Suppl 1):P20 doi:10.1186/cc7184
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://ccforum.com/content/13/S1/P20
| Published: | 13 March 2009 |
© 2009 Marbán and López; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Introduction
The aim of this study is to analyse our experience with tracheostomies performed in the critical care unit of a tertiary university hospital.
Methods
A retrospective clinical records review of patients who underwent this procedure in a 7-year period.
Results
From January 2001 to December 2007, 6,333 patients were admitted to our unit; 1,528 needed mechanical ventilation (MV) for more than 48 hours and 443 underwent tracheostomy. The median age was 56 years (14 to 88 years); 66% were male. The median APACHE II score was 20 (4 to 44). The main diagnoses were polytrauma including head injury in 24.2%, other structural neurological diseases in 21%, and prolonged weaning of various aetiologies in 35%. The percutaneous dilational technique was used in the majority of cases (90%). The mean duration of MV prior to tracheostomy was 13.8 days (SD = 6.4). The overall complication rate was 6%. Intraprocedural complications were atelectasis (0.4%) and bleeding (2%). Two of the patients needed surgical control or transfusion (0.4%). Two stoma infections developed in the open tracheostomy group. The most frequent complication was tracheal stenosis, encountered in 15 patients (3%). The ICU mortality was 20.7%. Of the 351 patients discharged from the ICU, 45.8% were decannulated prior to discharge from the ICU and 31% in the ward; 23% of them could not be decannulated at any moment. Ward mortality in the group of patients decannulated in the ICU was 5%, 10% in the patients decannulated in the ward and 37% in those who failed decannulation, for a total of 50 deaths before hospital discharge (11%). The main diagnoses of the patients who died on the ward were: residual encephalopathy in 62% (postanoxic, posttraumatic or other causes), severe chronic respiratory failure in 10%, spinal cord injury in 6%, and neuromuscular disease in 4%.
Conclusion
We had a low rate of early complications, similar to other series, with no procedure-related deaths [1]. Our main complication was airway stenosis. As in other studies, patients who needed a tracheostomy belonged to a group of patients with a high severity and mortality. Some of them do not recover a satisfactory neurological and functional status to be decannulated and present a high ward mortality.
References
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Díaz-Regañón G, Miñambres E, Ruiz A, González-Herrera S, Holanda-Peña M, López-Espadas F: Safety and complications of percutaneous tracheostomy in a cohort of 800 mixed ICU patients.
Anaesthesia 2008, 63:1198-1203. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text