Bag valve mask ventilation

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Overview

Oral cavity and oropharynx.
Sagittal section through the head and neck showing the subdivisions of the pharynx.
  • Simple, life-saving skill that is critical in airway management
  • Deliver oxygen at positive pressure via a bag containing oxygen connected to a mask placed over a patient's nose and mouth
  • Oxygenation and ventilation prior to definitive airway placement or bridge to sedative metabolization

Indications

Contraindications

No absolute contraindications

Difficult BVM (MOANS)

  • Mask seal
  • Obesity
  • Aged
  • No teeth
  • Stiffness (resistance to ventilation)

Equipment Needed

  • Bag connected to oxygen at 15L/min
  • Mask connected to the bag
  • Consider PEEP valve (provides PEEP between ventilations)
  • OPA/NPA/adjuncts to facilitate successful BVM ventilation
  • Suction
  • SpO2 monitor helpful

Children

  • Proper-sized mask (covers nose and chin)
  • Proper bag (enough to see chest rise)

Procedure

EC technique with modified chin lift.
EC technique with modified chin lift.
Two-handed technique.

"EC" Hand Position

  • Thumb and index finger holding mask in a "C" position
    • Thumb superior and index inferior
  • 3rd, 4th, 5th finger hold the mandible and perform a jaw thrust
  • Other hand used to bag

2-person

  • This technique provides an objectively better seal than the "EC" hand position[1]
  • One person holds the mask with both hands (lateral edges)
    • With double EC technique, index fingers and thumbs of both hands form C over mask and digits 3-5 lift the jaw at the rami of mandible
    • Can also press thumbs and thenar eminences over lateral edges of mask and use digits 2-5 to lift jaw at the rami of the mandible
    • Important to life jaw into mask and not press mask down into jaw; can occlude the airway and cause difficulty with ventilation
  • 2nd person bags

Rate

  • Adult bag at 10-12/min
  • Children 16-20/min
  • Infants 30/min
  • Neonates 40-60/min

Tidal Volume

  • Avoid hyperinflation
    • Average bag volume is approximately 1600 cc; only necessary to delivery approximately 500 cc
  • Bag until chest rise is seen

Complications

  • Poor seal
    • Remove dentures to intubate; keep them in to bag/mask ventilate
    • For a beard smear lube to help create better seal or cut the center out of a tegaderm and apply to the patient's perioral area
  • Poor oxygenation/ventilation
  • Overinflation of the stomach causing emesis/aspiration

See Also

Airway Pages

External Links

Videos

References

  1. [pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20808210/] Joffe AM;Hetzel S;Liew. “A Two-Handed Jaw-Thrust Technique Is Superior to the One-Handed ‘EC-Clamp’ Technique for Mask Ventilation in the Apneic Unconscious Person.” Anesthesiology, U.S. National Library of Medicine, Oct. 2010.