Radiographic Predictors of Difficult Fiberscopic Intubation During General Anesthesia in Patients With a Cervical Collar to Simulate a Difficult Airway.
Woo-Young Jo, Sang Joon Park, Kyung Won Shin, Hee-Pyoung Park, Hyongmin Oh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Predictors of difficult fiberscopic intubation have not been fully elucidated. This study focused on identifying radiographic predictors of difficult fiberscopic intubation during general anesthesia in patients with a cervical collar.
Methods: This retrospective study included unconscious patients who underwent orotracheal intubation using a flexible fiberscope while wearing a cervical collar to simulate a difficult airway. Easy fiberscopic intubation was defined as successful fiberscopic intubation within 120 seconds on the first attempt without desaturation below 90%. The patients were divided into easy (n=133) and difficult (n=24) fiberscopic intubation groups. Demographic, mask ventilation-related, upper airway-related, and radiographic variables measured on sagittal images of preoperative cervical x-ray and magnetic resonance imaging were analyzed.
Results: The difficult fiberscopic intubation group had a smaller oral cavity area (2.1 [1.2-2.5] vs. 2.9 [2.1-3.7] cm2, P<0.001), higher tongue area divided by oral cavity area (9.3 [6.5-13.3] vs. 6.4 [4.6-8.3], P<0.001), smaller epiglottis angle (33±10° vs. 37±8°, P=0.02), and longer skin-glottis distance (1.3 [1.1-1.6] vs. 1.1 [1.0-1.3] cm, P=0.004). Tongue area/oral cavity area (odds ratio per 1 [95% CI]: 1.24 [1.09-1.40]) and skin-glottis distance (odds ratio per 1 cm [95% CI]: 13.0 [2.69-62.4]) were independently associated with the difficulty in fiberscopic intubation.
Conclusions: High tongue area/oral cavity area and long skin-glottis distance were predictive of difficult fiberscopic intubation during general anesthesia in patients with a cervical collar.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology (JNA) is a peer-reviewed publication directed to an audience of neuroanesthesiologists, neurosurgeons, neurosurgical monitoring specialists, neurosurgical support staff, and Neurosurgical Intensive Care Unit personnel. The journal publishes original peer-reviewed studies in the form of Clinical Investigations, Laboratory Investigations, Clinical Reports, Review Articles, Journal Club synopses of current literature from related journals, presentation of Points of View on controversial issues, Book Reviews, Correspondence, and Abstracts from affiliated neuroanesthesiology societies.
JNA is the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience in Anesthesiology and Critical Care, the Neuroanaesthesia and Critical Care Society of Great Britain and Ireland, the Association de Neuro-Anesthésiologie Réanimation de langue Française, the Wissenschaftlicher Arbeitskreis Neuroanästhesie der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Anästhesiologie und Intensivmedizen, the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Deutschsprachiger Neuroanästhesisten und Neuro-Intensivmediziner, the Korean Society of Neuroanesthesia, the Japanese Society of Neuroanesthesia and Critical Care, the Neuroanesthesiology Chapter of the Colegio Mexicano de Anesthesiología, the Indian Society of Neuroanesthesiology and Critical Care, and the Thai Society for Neuroanesthesia.