But...but...but, they did it on Trauma!!!! Then they did a single med RSI to manage her airway to top it off!!!
Don't mock me! Ya cricothyrotomy. Sorry brain fart right there. I'm just saying if you move that patients neck and cut C1 in the process they're pretty much brain dead. I'll take an airway issue over a dead body any day of the week.
I don't think anyone was mocking you...there's a big difference between a thoracostomy and a crichothyrotomy...that's all they were saying.
I wouldn't jump right to them being brain dead because of a spinal cord injury at C1 either. Whether it be complete or incomplete SCI you're looking at serious neurological deficits if not complete quadriplegia/ventilator dependency though, I'll absolutely agree with that. Is brain damage/death a risk? Absolutely, but a SCI at the C1 level =/= brain death.
I sustained a C2-4 spinal injury playing football 6 years ago. A lot of rehab later (no surgery thank goodness, I count my blessings every day for that) and I'm a fully functioning 23 year old with no deficits or brain damage. Albeit I didn't sustain an injury like the one described here and didn't have any permanent spinal cord injury (again, I count my blessings every day for that as well) but I still had a high cervical spinal injury. Is everyone as lucky as me? Absolutely not, but you can still have a positive outcome with a high spinal injury, that's the point I'm trying to get across.
With that said, airway comes first, they can't live without an airway, they can live without neurological function below the injury site. If you can't manage their airway you're going to have a dead body on your hands pretty quickly anyways. Do you think CPR with an unstable spinal injury is going to end well? If that life is enjoyable is a whole different argument and it's not a decision we or even a physician is allowed to make.
A surgical airway is an option but you're adding a huge degree of difficulty to establishing that airway if not making it impossible to establish without having them midline before you start cutting. I guess if you're really stuck a needle crichothyrotomy could be an option with OLMD but at that point you're in a REALLY bad situation and it probably isn't going to make a huge difference. You can't really ventilate through a "coffee straw". In a situation like that I'd agree, you've probably got a brain dead patient on your hands. Not from the spinal injury but from the anoxic brain injury they're sustaining right in front of your eyes.
Life > limb.
I agree with what everyone else has said. My protocols say that I have to attempt to get the patient to a neutral, midline position unless resistance is met during realignment. With that said, it's very easy to chart around and/or call and get OLMD to not do it. In this scenario I wouldn't be fumbling around with this patient's neck. Applying whatever methods are needed to get appropriate spinal motion restriction in their current position, provide analgesia, scoop them and transport calmly and smoothly to a facility capable of neurosurgery.