Rocuronium ≤1.5 mg/kg versus >1.5 mg/kg and inadequate paralysis in prehospital and retrieval intubation: A retrospective study Clare Hayes-Bradley MBBS

Rocuronium ≤1.5 mg/kg versus >1.5 mg/kg and inadequate paralysis in prehospital and retrieval intubation: A retrospective study

Clare Hayes-Bradley MBBS, BScMadelaine Tarrant MBChB, BSc

First published: 01 June 2022

https://doi.org/10.1111/1742-6723.14008

 

Findings

High dose Rocuronium leads to lower rates of inadequate relaxation

Bottom line

To achieve rapid and adequate relaxation for laryngoscopy up to 2mg/kg may be necessary in order to increase rate of successful intubation

What is this paper about

This paper compared adequate paralysis of patients requiring RSI in the field between <1.5mg/kg and >1.5mg/kg Rocuronium being used

The definition of inadequate paralysis was inability to perform laryngoscopy due to movement and inadequate mouth opening, grading of laryngoscope view was not included

Study design

  • Retrospective observational study on prospectively collected data
  • Single center study

Population

Patients requiring in field intubation in Sydney area via retrieval services

Airway registry database utilized to examine and compare drug dose and relaxation between 2017-2018

Characteristic

  • 595 patients included, 211 received < 1.5mg/kg, 384 received >1.5mg/kg
  • P value of < 0.05, confidence interval 95%
  • Exclusions: documented extravasation of drugs, cold intubation, suxamethonium used, uitilization of LMA or other airway device

Findings

High dose rocuronium lead to 0.5% inadequate relaxation and low dose rocuronium to 2%

Weakness of study design

  • Single center observational study
  • Intubations performed for different reasons
  • Small number of patients

Take home points

Dosing of rocuronium to achieve fast and adequate relaxation is likely higher then often used. A dose of < 1.5mg/kg increases the risk of inadequate intubation.

The safety of high dose Rocuronium (2mg/kg) has not been validated in studies.