r/emergencymedicine • u/Ineffaboble • May 28 '25
Advice ICU doc: “Peri-intubation arrest is incredibly rare”
AITA?
I had a patient with a very bizarre presentation of flash pulmonary edema brady down and arrest after a crash intubation for sats heading down to 65% and no clear reversible cause at the time.
My nurses filed a critical incident report for completely unrelated reasons.
The ICU attending now looking after her tagged in and said “peri-intubation arrest is incredibly rare, and the medical management of this case should be examined.”
I know for a fact that this ICU sees mostly stable post surgical and post stroke patients and my friend who has been a nurse there for a year said she has never seen a crash intubation, let alone one led by this doc.
I also know that his base specialty is anesthesia.
I replied, “happy to discuss, bearing in mind that the ICU context and the ER ‘first 15 minutes’ context are radically different.”
I acknowledge that peri-intubation arrest is not super common, but neither does it imply poor management, especially in an undifferentiated patient where we don’t even know the underlying etiology.
2
u/medschoolloans123 ED Attending May 28 '25 edited May 28 '25
It’s not rare at all. I always have push dose epi at bedside for all my tubes because I’ve seen it happen so many times. Heck sometime I have peripheral levo ready to run.
It is not “incredibly rare” at all this person has no idea what they are talking about.
The number quoted in a lot of literate is up to 3%. That sounds low but that’s 3 out of every 100 tubes. That actually quite a bit.