DAMAR HAMLIN AND THE DOCTORS ON AN NFL SIDELINE

Physician anesthesiologist at Stanford at Associated Anesthesiologists Medical Group
Richard Novak, MD is a Stanford physician board certified in anesthesiology and internal medicine.Dr. Novak is an Adjunct Clinical Professor in the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine at Stanford University, the Medical Director at Waverley Surgery Center in Palo Alto, California, and a member of the Associated Anesthesiologists Medical Group in Palo Alto, California.
emailrjnov@yahoo.com
THE ANESTHESIA CONSULTANT

On January 3rd 2023, 24-year-old Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest when he collapsed after  experiencing a helmet-to-his-sternum tackle against the Cincinnati Bengals. Hamlin received CPR (CardioPulmonary Resuscitation) on the field, and his heartbeat was restored before he was taken to a Cincinnati hospital. Was there an anesthesiologist involved in Damar Hamlin’s resuscitation? Yes, either an anesthesiologist or an emergency room doctor who was an airway expert was involved in Damar’s successful resuscitation.

According to Dr. William A. Knight IV, a professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, who led the team treating Damar Hamlin: “He (Damar) was not trached on the field. He was intubated on the field, had what I would deem a textbook resuscitation on the field from, again, immediate bystander CPR, defibrillation, airway management and then transport to the hospital. It’s critical that we do that resuscitation at the scene of where a cardiac arrest is. That portends the best recovery. There was no trach or airway other than the endotracheal tube that he has.”

The immediate resuscitation of a witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest such as Damar Hamlin’s included: 1) the assessment that he was not breathing;  2) the assessment that his heart was not beating;  3) chest compressions (CPR); followed by 4) the application of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) which diagnosed the heart rhythm and shocked the patient.

The cardiac rhythm responsible for most sudden cardiac arrests is ventricular fibrillation, in which the heart muscle merely quivers and fails to eject any blood as in a normal beating heart. Shocking the patient’s chest is usually successful in converting ventricular fibrillation into a return to normal cardiac rhythm with the return of normal spontaneous circulation (ROSC).

ECG of normal heart rhythm

 

ECG of ventricular fibrillation, showing chaotic electrical activity with no normal rhythm

 

The measures of the Cincinnati medical team were successful in Damar Hamlin’s case, and he was moved into the EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) ambulance. I have not been able to locate any video evidence from the football field showing placement of the endotracheal tube by the airway specialist. Per Dr. Knight’s comments above, the endotracheal tube may have been placed once Damar was inside the ambulance.

Once Damar’s heartbeat was restored and breathing of 100% oxygen was applied via the endotracheal tube, the initial acute resuscitation of Airway-Breathing-Circulation (A-B-C) were completed.

More details of Damar Hamlin’s hospital course were supplied in Dr. Knight’s interview.

The remainder of Damar’s medical records are protected healthcare information, and will not be available to the media or the public. In all probability, Damar was placed under general anesthetic intravenous sedation in the Intensive Care Unit while a ventilator did the breathing for him. Damar may have been treated with hypothermia (lowering his body temperature to around 89°F to 93°F). Per Johns Hopkins Medicine, “Therapeutic hypothermia can be a good choice if the heart restarted but you are still not responsive. It can raise the chance that you will wake up. Experts are not sure why lowering the body’s temperature reduces brain damage. The chemical reactions of the body slow down. The lowered temperature may also lessen inflammation in the brain. Both of these factors may help reduce injury. . . . Hypothermic treatment usually lasts about 24 hours.”

When the medical team turned off the intravenous general anesthetic sedatives, Damar’s neurologic function was intact, which was a wonderful outcome. While the endotracheal tube was in place he could not speak, and initially he had to communicate by pen and paper. At first Damar seemed to require high doses of oxygen via the endotracheal breathing tube, but the percentage of oxygen in his inhaled gases was progressively lowered as his lung function improved. Per Dr. Knight, Damar had a form of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) secondary to his acute event. As Damar’s lungs improved, the oxygen concentration in his inhaled gases could be decreased toward the room air concentration of 21% oxygen that we are all breathing, and his endotracheal tube could be removed.

As of January 9th 2023, Damar was moved from a hospital in Cincinnati to a hospital in Buffalo, New York, and was doing well.

January 8th, 2023, Damar Hamlin awake in the University of Cincinnati Medical Center

 

To put Damar Hamlin’s resuscitation in context, I’m republishing the following paragraphs from an article I wrote in April 2017 regarding anesthesiologists and acute medical care preparation on site at an NFL game:

 

The National Football League (NFL) of American football is a multibillion-dollar industry which dominates the sports airwaves and press headlines from the first preseason game each August until the Super Bowl each February. Do you know the intersection between an anesthesiologist and the NFL? At each and every NFL game there must be one Airway Management Physician on the sideline. This Airway Management Physician is most commonly an anesthesiologist or an emergency medicine physician. My anesthesia company had the contract for the San Francisco 49ers Airway Management Physician during the 2005-2006 season, and I worked in this role. It was a fascinating job, and in this column I’ll fill you in on the experience.

Why must every NFL game have an Airway Management Physician on the field? Football is a violent sport played by young men of unprecedented speed and size. When these men collide there is always the risk of injury. The NFL Physicians Society (NFLPS) mandates a 27-person game-day medical staff.

nflhealthcarechart

Each sideline includes 2 orthopedists, 2 primary care physicians, 4 athletic trainers, 1 unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant, and 1 chiropractor. In addition, the Stadium Medical Team includes 1 dentist, 1 ophthalmologist, 1 Airway Management Physician, 2 Emergency Medical Technicians, 2 independent athletic trainers, 1 radiology technician, and 1 visiting team medical liaison.

During the game, common football injuries to the knee, ankle, foot, shoulder, elbow, or hand are matters for the team orthopedic specialists, the athletic trainers, and perhaps the chiropractor. Injuries to the head activate a concussion protocol in which the neurological examination is carried out with the aid of the neurotrauma consultant.

The Airway Management Physician is present in case of a severe medical complication. This would include a cardiac arrest, a respiratory arrest, a cervical spine injury, or an airway injury which impairs breathing. In these situations the acute medical management must follow the standard sequence of Airway, Breathing, and Circulation. The player’s airway must be open and secured prior to any effective breathing or cardiac care. If the player’s airway is not open, the Airway Management Physician is responsible for placing a breathing tube through the player’s mouth into his windpipe so oxygen can be effectively ventilated in and out of the lungs. The absence of oxygen to a patient’s brain for 3-5 minutes can cause permanent brain damage.

The NFL game day Airway Management Physician will be an experienced anesthesiologist or emergency room doctor, because these are the two specialties which deal with the placement of urgent breathing tubes in hospital operating rooms, emergency rooms, or intensive care units.

The urgent placement of an airway tube is called a Rapid Sequence Intubation, or RSI. Anesthesiologists routinely use RSI technique to place a breathing tube into a patient’s windpipe prior to emergency surgery. Emergency surgery patients are always classified as “full stomach” patients, meaning that they have not fasted for the required 8 hours prior to elective surgery. Patients who have full stomachs are at risk for vomiting their stomach contents into their lungs. This can be a lethal complication. In my 30+-year career as an anesthesia attending, I’ve placed thousands of RSI breathing tubes prior to surgeries. Emergency room physicians place RSI breathing tubes for various causes including trauma, cardiac arrests, or respiratory arrests.

 

To perform a RSI, the anesthesiologist or emergency room doctor will administer a hypnotic drug (such as propofol or ketamine) if the patient is conscious, followed by a paralyzing drug (such as succinylcholine or rocuronium). At the same time, a medical colleague (a surgeon or a nurse) will press down on the cricoid cartilage at the anterior aspect of the patient’s voice box. This is called a Sellick maneuver or cricoid pressure, and this serves to compress cricoid cartilage (which circles the windpipe) downward against the esophagus to reduce the chance of stomach contents regurgitating into the mouth and/or lungs.

A doctor using a laryngoscope to place an endotracheal tube into a football player’s trachea.

 

Next the anesthesiologist or emergency room doctor inserts a lighted instrument called a laryngoscope into the patient’s mouth, to identify and visualize the opening to the trachea or windpipe. The physician then inserts a hollow plastic breathing tube called an endotracheal tube (ET tube) into the windpipe. The ET tube has an inflatable balloon near its tip. Once the ET tube is in place, the physician inflates the balloon to secure a tight fit within the windpipe. Oxygen can then be ventilated in and out of the tube via a breathing bag.

A RSI is a stressful acute medical procedure in which there is little room or time for error. If the physician has difficulty inserting the breathing tube and the patient has no oxygen entry, the patient can suffer anoxic brain damage within 3-5 minutes. In a hospital setting, even when the physician has all the necessary equipment at his or her fingertips, a RSI can be a harrowing experience. Trying to execute a RSI on the 50-yard-line of a football field, on a 300-pound athlete with a thick neck and who is wearing bulky shoulder pads and perhaps a football helmet, under national television audience scrutiny, would be stressful to the extreme.

No NFL player to date has ever had a cardiac or respiratory arrest on the football field during a game. On August 20th, 2005, San Francisco 49ers offensive lineman Thomas Herrion collapsed and died the locker room after a preseason game in Denver. Per a personal account from a physician present in the locker room at the time, the team had gathered around and closed their eyes to say the Lord’s Prayer, and during that prayer they heard a loud thump. They opened their eyes to see Herrion lying on the ground unconscious and seizing. No anesthesiologist or emergency room physician was present. The physicians who were present attempted to revive Herrion. He was transported to St. Anthony’s Central Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Per coroner Amy Martin, a forensic pathologist in Denver, Herrion weighed 335 pounds and was 6 feet 3 inches tall. His autopsy was positive for significant blockage of the right coronary artery, and his cause of death was listed as heart disease. His blood tests were negative for any steroids or performance-enhancing drugs. He entered the game for about 20 plays near the end of the game, and he appeared to be in normal physical condition prior to entering the locker room.

In the weeks following Herrion’s death, my anesthesia company was hired to be the Airway Management Physicians for the remainder of that 49ers season. I was the Airway Management Physician for the September 25, 2005 game between the 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. Prior to the game we dressed in team medical polo shirts in the team locker room with the other members of the medical team. Some physicians were engaged in pregame consultations with the trainers regarding players with injuries or ailments. Before the game I joined a group of physicians who walked to the opposing sideline to introduce ourselves to members of the Cowboys medical team. Just prior to kickoff, when the 49ers ran out of their locker room onto the field, we physicians walked just behind them. The soundtrack to our stadium entrance was the same roaring ovation that the sellout crowd gave their football heroes—it was an unforgettable experience.

I was given a small, 10 X 4 X 4-inch pouch labeled “RSI equipment.” Inside were the necessary items: the laryngoscope, the syringes, and the drugs necessary for a routine Rapid Sequence Intubation. I must confess that for multiple reasons I was praying I would not intubating a 335-pound lineman with the contents of that pouch on that day. Along with the other members of the medical team, I was instructed to remain between the 30-yard-line and the goal line on either end of the field, and not to enter the team bench area between the 30-yard-lines. I was given a red hat to wear so I could be easily identified in an emergency situation. I remained in the immediate vicinity of the other team doctors so I was ready for a team approach should an emergency occur. I watched the game vigilantly so I would be ready should an emergency occur.

There were no cardiac arrests or fractured cervical spines, and my services were not required on that Sunday. Following that season the 49ers contracted with the full-time faculty of Stanford Medical Center to be their Airway Management Physicians, and I never had the opportunity to reprise the experience of that one 49ers-Dallas game.

I was left with several lasting impressions regarding the NFL anesthesiologist experience:

  1. The sheer size of the linemen makes their airways potentially difficult to manage. I performed anesthetics on multiple San Francisco 49ers players for orthopedic surgeries over 15 years time. Their cardiovascular fitness was never in question, but their bulk was striking. A Body Mass Index (BMI) table states that a 335 pound, 6 foot 3 inch patient has a BMI=41. A BMI over 40 is defined as Morbid Obesity, and this is always a significant anesthesia concern. Morbid Obesity carries a risk classification of American Society of Anesthesiologists Class 3, which is defined as “a patient with a severe medical disease which is currently stable.” A professional athlete is more healthy than an inactive couch potato fan who watches the NFL on television, but nonetheless anesthetizing gigantic men requires skill and entails risk.
  2. A second lasting impression is that the RSI pouch I was given in 2005 would be woefully inadequate in 2023. An essential tool to intubate a 300-pound giant wearing football gear is a portable video laryngoscope, such as the McGrath 5: hqdefaultThis is a handheld tool with a camera on one end and a video screen on the other. The video laryngoscope allows the physician to see around the curves of a large man’s tongue and jaw, and to visualize the opening to the windpipe without moving or extending the cervical spine (which in some football injuries must be suspected of having an unstable fracture). I’m certain that modern day RSI equipment at NFL games includes not only a portable videoscope but also a larger array of breathing tubes and airway management tools such as you’d find in a difficult airway cart in an operating room or an emergency room. The American Society of Anesthesiologists Difficult Airway Algorithm references the optimal approach to any airway difficulty, and an airway emergency on an NFL playing field would be best managed per this Algorithm.
  3. My third profound recollection is how memorable it was to be on the sideline for an NFL game, and how memorable it was to witness the spectacle up close. My own football skills never advanced past 3-on-3 touch football, but I’m a fan, and I’ll always remember my adventure as a member of the medical team for America’s number one sports attraction.

 

All our thoughts and prayers are with Damar Hamlin for his continued recovery in January 2023. The NFL’s preparation for acute cardiac arrest injuries proved successful in his case.

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