Abstract
PurposeReductions in heart rate occur frequently in children during critical care intubation and are currently considered the gold standard for haemodynamic instability. Our objective was to estimate loss of heart beats during intubation and compare this to reduction in heart rate alone whilst testing the impact of atropine pre-medication.MethodsData were extracted from a prospective 2-year cohort study of intubation ECGs from critically ill children in PICU/Paediatric Transport. A three step algorithm was established to exclude variation in pre-intubation heart rate (using a 95%CI limit derived from pre-intubation heart rate variation of the children included), measure the heart rate over time and finally the estimate the numbers of lost beats.Results333 intubations in children were eligible for inclusion of which 245 were available for analysis (74%). Intubations where the fall in heart rate was less than 50 bpm were accompanied almost exclusively by less than 25 lost beats (n = 175, median 0 [0–1]). When there was a reduction of >50 bpm there was a poor correlation with numbers of lost beats (n = 70, median 42 [15–83]). During intubation the median number of lost beats was 8 [1]–[32] when atropine was not used compared to 0 [0–0] when atropine was used (p<0.001).ConclusionsA reduction in heart rate during intubation of <50 bpm reliably predicted a minimal loss of beats. When the reduction in heart rate was >50 bpm the heart rate was poorly predictive of lost beats. A study looking at the relationship between lost beats and cardiac output needs to be performed. Atropine reduces both fall in heart rate and loss of beats. Similar area-under-the-curve methodology may be useful for estimating risk when biological parameters deviate outside normal range.
Highlights
There is a risk of haemodynamic instability leading to death during intubation during critical illness (CCI)
Ninety-eight children were included from Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and 147 from Intensive Care Transport Service (ICT)
A reduction in heart rate during intubation of,50 bpm reliably predicted a minimal loss of beats
Summary
There is a risk of haemodynamic instability leading to death during intubation during critical illness (CCI). Our recent study in children has demonstrated that the relatively frequent reductions in heart rate are unrelated to death during intubation [4]. Physiologic reductions in heart rate may occur due to the reflex activation of the Vagus nerve by mechanical stimulation of the laryngopharynx and/or hypoxia [6,7]. They may occur due to the action of induction agents and/or depolarising neuromuscular blockers [8,9,10]. The choice of measuring heart rate changes during CCI in children is due to the relative parasympathetic predominance in early life which increases the likelihood of vagal activation [11]
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