Coronial
SAhospital

Coroner's Finding: TILKA Susan Marie

Deceased

Susan Marie Tilka

Demographics

52y, female

Date of death

2008-01-13

Finding date

2011-11-15

Cause of death

haemorrhage from a tracheal-innominate artery fistula complicating a tracheostomy following cerebral infarction

AI-generated summary

A 52-year-old woman died from catastrophic haemorrhage due to a tracheal-innominate artery fistula 10 days after percutaneous tracheostomy following stroke and decompressive craniectomy. Minor bleeding was observed 3 days before death. The coroner found no shortcomings in treatment and concluded the death was not avoidable. Tracheoarterial fistula is extremely rare (0.7% incidence) and has no reliable diagnostic tests. While sentinel bleeding precedes catastrophic haemorrhage in 34-50% of cases, the observed bleeding (3mls) was ambiguous and could represent minor stoma bleeding rather than herald bleeding. Bronchoscopy, angiography, and other investigations would have low diagnostic yield. The coroner recommended enhanced staff education about bleeding as a potential warning sign and modification of tracheostomy management protocols and training workbooks.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes. Report an inaccuracy.

Specialties

neurologyintensive careneurosurgeryrespiratory medicine

Clinical conditions

cerebral infarctionischaemic strokecerebral oedemarespiratory failuretracheoarterial fistulatracheal-innominate artery fistula

Procedures

decompressive craniectomyhemicraniectomypercutaneous tracheostomytracheal suctionfibre optic bronchoscopy

Contributing factors

  • tracheal-innominate artery fistula formation
  • percutaneous tracheostomy placement
  • anticoagulation therapy
  • sentinel bleeding not definitively identified as herald bleeding

Coroner's recommendations

  1. Relevant protocols should be reviewed to prominently reference bleeding as a warning sign of potential catastrophic bleed and as a trigger for ward nurses to engage with the intensive care equipment nurse
  2. All nurses in wards caring for tracheostomies should complete the 'Principles for Basic Tracheostomy Management Workbook'
  3. The workbook should be modified to address bleeding in circumstances other than tracheal aspirate during suctioning
Full text

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