2. BVM Ventilation
• The most important airway skill
• Always the first response to inadequate
oxygenation and ventilation
• The first “bail-out” maneuver to a failed
intubation attempt
• Attenuates the urgency to intubate
3. Golden Rules of Bagging
• “ Anybody ( almost ) can be oxygenated
and ventilated with a bag and a mask “
• The art of bagging should be mastered
before the art of intubation
• Manual ventilation skill with proper
equipment is a fundamental premise of
advanced airway Rx
4. BVM Ventilation
• Requires practice to master
• One hand to
– maintain face seal
– position head
– maintain patency
• Other hand ventilates
5. BVM Ventilation: Technique
• insert oropharyngeal/nasopharyngeal
• “Sniffing”position if C-spine OK
• Thumb + index to maintain face seal
– Stem of mask in thenar webspace
• Middle finger under mandibular
symphysis
• Ring/little finger under angle of
mandible
6. BVM Ventilation:
Assessment of Efficacy
• Observe the chest rise and fall
• Good bilateral air entry
• Lack of air entering the stomach
• Feeling the bag
• Pulse oximetry
7. BVM Ventilation:
Mask Seal Tips and Pearls
• Easier to get seals with masks too large
than too small
• Inflate mask collar correctly
• Apply lubricant to beards to “mat down”
hair
• It is easier to bag with dentures in place
• If edentulous insert gauze sponges into
cheeks
8. Predictors of a Difficult
Airway : Bag-Valve-Mask
Ventilation
• Upper airway obstruction
• Lack of dentures
• Beard
• Midfacial smash
• facial burns, dressings, scarring
• poor lung mechanics( resistance or
compliance )
9. Difficult Airway : BVM
• degree of difficulty from zero to infinite
• zero = no external effort or internal device
required
• one person jaw thrust/ face seal
• oropharyngeal or nasopharyngeal AW
• two person jaw thrust / face seal
– both internal airway devices
• infinite = no patency despite maximal external
effort and full use of OP/NP
10. Algorithm for Difficulty
“Bagging”
• Remove FB - Magill forceps
• Triple maneuver if c-spine clear
– Head tilt, jaw lift, mouth opening
• Nasal or oropharyngeal airways
• two-person, four-hand technique
• Do not abandon bagging unless it is
impossible with two people and both an
11. Difficult Ventilation:
Obese Patients
• excess soft tissue causes obstruction
• Use both OP and NP airways
• Two hands for mask seal and jaw thrust
• Avoid pushing in on soft tissue under jaw
– may force into airway, worsen obstruction
• Place patient in reverse Trendelenburg
– decreases abdo pressure on diaphragm
– lowers amount of pressure needed to bag
12. Difficult Ventilation :
Edentulous Patients
• Cheeks fall inward; difficult seal
• Inflate mask cuff to maximum
• Allow weight of bag to fall down over
side of leak
• Place gauze at site of leak or inside
mouth to “puff out” cheek
• Two-handed technique using 3rd and 4th
fingers to “bunch up” cheek
13. Difficult Ventilation :
Beards and Mustaches
• Water soluable lubricant applied to facial
hair may improve the mask seal
14. Difficult Ventilation : Upper
Airway Obstruction (Epiglottitis)
• The pop-off valve is designed to prevent
delivering excessive volume and pressure
• Higher pressures may be required in
upper airway obstruction
• Occlude valve manually or with the built
in occluding device
16. Difficult Airway Maxims
• The first response to failure of bag-mask
ventilation is always better bag-mask
ventilation
– optimize airway position
– place OP and NP airways
– two-handed technique
– try lifting head off pillow to open airway
• Generate as much positive pressure as
possible without inflating the stomach