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Abcde Erp39p44
Appendices
Underlying principles
The approach to all critically ill patients, including those who are having an
anaphylactic reaction, is the same. The underlying principles are:
1. Use an Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, and Exposure (the ABCDEs)
approach to assess and treat the patient.
2. Do a complete initial assessment and re-assess regularly.
3. Treat life-threatening problems before moving to the next part of assessment.
4. Assess the effects of treatment.
5. Call for help early (e.g., calling for an ambulance or resuscitation team).
6. Use all members of the team or helpers. This will enable interventions, e.g.,
calling for help, assessment, attaching monitoring equipment, and intravenous
access, to be undertaken simultaneously.
7. Communicate effectively.
8. The aim of the initial treatments is to keep the patient alive, and achieve some
clinical improvement. This will buy time for further treatment and expert help.
9. Remember - it can take a few minutes for treatments to work.
10. The ABCDE approach can be used irrespective of your training and experience
in clinical assessment or treatment. The detail of your assessment and what
treatments you give will depend on your clinical knowledge and skills. If you
recognise a problem or are unsure, call for help.
First steps
1. Ensure personal safety.
2. First look at the patient in general to see if the patient ‘looks unwell’.
3. If the patient is awake ask, “How are you?” If the patient appears unconscious,
shake him and ask, “Are you all right?” If he responds normally, he has a patent
airway, is breathing and has brain perfusion. If he speaks only in short
sentences, he may have breathing problems. Failure of the patient to respond is
a marker of critical illness.
4. Monitor the vital signs early. Attach a pulse oximeter, ECG monitor, and non-
invasive blood pressure monitor to all critically ill patients, as soon as possible.
Airway (A)
Airway obstruction is an emergency. Get expert help immediately.
Breathing (B)
1. During the immediate assessment of breathing, it is vital to diagnose and treat
immediately life-threatening conditions, e.g., acute severe bronchospasm. Look,
listen and feel for the general signs of respiratory distress: sweating, central
cyanosis, use of the accessory muscles of respiration, subcostal and sternal
recession in children, and abdominal breathing.
2. Count the respiratory rate. The normal adult rate is 12 - 20 breaths min-1.
A high, or increasing, respiratory rate is a marker of illness and a warning that
the patient may deteriorate suddenly.
Assess the depth of each breath, the pattern (rhythm) of respiration and whether
chest expansion is equal and normal on both sides.
3. Record the inspired oxygen concentration (%) given to the patient and the SpO2
reading of the pulse oximeter. A normal SpO2 in a patient receiving oxygen
does not necessarily indicate adequate ventilation: the pulse oximeter detects
oxygenation and not hypercapnia. The patient may be breathing inadequately
and have a high PaCO2.
4. Listen to the patient’s breath sounds a short distance from his face. Rattling
airway noises indicate airway secretions, usually because the patient cannot
cough or take a deep breath. Stridor or wheeze suggests partial, but important,
airway obstruction. Listen to the chest with a stethoscope if you are trained to
do so. The specific treatment of breathing disorders depends upon the cause.
Bronchospasm causing wheeze is common in anaphylaxis. All critically ill
patients should be given oxygen.
5. Initially give the highest possible concentration of inspired oxygen using a mask
with an oxygen reservoir. Ensure high flow oxygen (usually greater than 10
litres min-1) to prevent collapse of the reservoir during inspiration. If the patient’s
trachea is intubated, give high concentration oxygen with a self-inflating bag. As
soon as a pulse oximeter is available, titrate the oxygen to maintain an oxygen
saturation of 94-98%. In the sickest patients this is not always possible so you
may have to accept a lower value, i.e., above 8 kPa (60 mm Hg), or 90-92%
oxygen saturation on a pulse oximeter.
Circulation (C)
In almost all medical emergencies, including an anaphylactic reaction, consider
hypovolaemia as the likeliest cause of shock until proved otherwise. In anaphylaxis
the shock is usually caused by vasodilation and fluid leaking from capillary blood
vessels. Unless there are obvious signs of a cardiac cause (e.g., chest pain, heart
failure), give intravenous fluid to any patient with low blood pressure and a high
heart rate. Remember that breathing problems, which should have been treated
earlier on in the breathing assessment, can also compromise a patient’s circulatory
state.
1. Look at the colour of the hands and digits: are they blue, pink, pale or mottled?
2. Assess the limb temperature by feeling the patient’s hands: are they cool or
warm?
3. Measure the capillary refill time. Apply cutaneous pressure for five seconds on a
fingertip held at heart level with enough pressure to cause blanching. Time how
long it takes for the skin to return to the colour of the surrounding skin after
releasing the pressure. The normal refill time is less than two seconds. A
prolonged time suggests poor peripheral perfusion. Other factors (e.g., cold
surroundings, poor lighting, old age) can prolong the time.
4. Assess the state of the veins: they may be under-filled or collapsed when
hypovolaemia is present.
6. Palpate peripheral and central pulses, assessing for presence, rate, quality,
regularity and equality. Barely palpable central pulses suggest a poor cardiac
output.
7. Measure the patient’s blood pressure. Even in shock, the blood pressure may
be normal, because compensatory mechanisms increase peripheral resistance
in response to reduced cardiac output. In anaphylaxis, vasodilation is common
and the blood pressure may fall precipitously very early on. A low diastolic blood
pressure suggests arterial vasodilation (as in anaphylaxis or sepsis). A
narrowed pulse pressure (difference between systolic and diastolic pressures)
suggests arterial vasoconstriction (cardiogenic shock or hypovolaemia).
9. Look for other signs of a poor cardiac output, such as reduced conscious level.
10. The treatment of cardiovascular collapse depends on the cause, but should be
directed at fluid replacement and restoration of tissue perfusion. Seek out signs
of conditions that are immediately life-threatening, e.g., massive or continuing
bleeding, or anaphylactic reaction, and treat them urgently.
11. A simple measure to improve the patient’s circulation is to lie the person flat and
raise the legs. This must be done with care as it may worsen any breathing
problems.
12. In pregnant patients use a left lateral tilt of at least 15 degrees to avoid caval
compression; after 20 weeks’ gestation the pregnant woman’s uterus can press
down on the inferior vena cava and impede venous return to the heart.
13. Insert one or more large-bore intravenous cannulae if trained to do so. Use
short, wide-bore cannulae, because they enable the highest flow. Use
intraosseous access if you are trained to do so, especially in children when
intravenous access is difficult.
14. Give a rapid fluid challenge: Adults - 500 mL of warmed crystalloid solution
(e.g., Hartmann’s or 0.9% saline) in 5-10 minutes if the patient is normotensive
or one litre if the patient is hypotensive. Use smaller volumes (e.g., 250 mL) for
adult patients with known cardiac failure and use closer monitoring (listen to the
chest for crepitations after each bolus). The use of invasive monitoring, e.g.,
central venous pressure (CVP), can help to assess fluid resuscitation. For
children give 20 mL/kg of warmed crystalloid.
15. Reassess the pulse rate and BP regularly (every 5 min), aiming for the patient‘s
normal BP. If this is unknown, in adults aim for a systolic BP greater than 100
mmHg.
16. If the patient does not improve, repeat the fluid challenge.
17. If there are symptoms and signs of cardiac failure (shortness of breath,
increased heart rate, raised JVP, a third heart sound, and inspiratory crackles in
the lungs on auscultation), decrease or stop the fluid infusion. Seek expert help
as other means of improving tissue perfusion (e.g., inotropes or vasopressors)
may be needed.
Disability (D)
Common causes of unconsciousness include profound hypoxia, hypercapnia,
cerebral hypoperfusion due to hypotension, or the recent administration of sedative
or analgesic drugs.
Exposure (E)
To examine the patient properly, full exposure of the body is necessary. Skin and
mucosal changes after anaphylaxis can be subtle. Minimise heat loss. Respect the
patient’s dignity.
Additional information
1. Take a full clinical history from the patient, relatives or friends, and other staff.
2. Review the patient’s notes and charts
a. Study both absolute and trended values of vital signs.
b. Check that important routine medications are prescribed and being
given.
3. Review the results of laboratory or radiological investigations.
4. Consider what level of care is required by the patient, e.g., transport to hospital if
in the community.
5. Make complete entries in the patient’s notes of your findings, assessment and
treatment. Record the patient’s response to therapy.
6. Consider definitive treatment of the patient’s underlying condition.