Randomized cross-over comparison of cervical-spine motion with the AirWay Scope or Macintosh laryngoscope with in-line stabilization: a video-fluoroscopic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Curvature and Range of Motion of the Cervical Spine After Laminaplasty* by Ikuo Aita, Yasuyoshi Wadano, and Takeshi Yabuki J Bone Joint Surg Am Volume.
Advertisements

Randomized controlled trial comparing the McGrath videolaryngoscope with the C-MAC videolaryngoscope in intubating adult patients with potential difficult.
McGrath videolaryngoscope for an anticipated difficult airway
Acupuncture and related techniques for postoperative pain: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials  Y. Sun, T.J. Gan, J.W. Dubose, A.S. Habib 
Tracheal intubation of morbidly obese patients: a randomized trial comparing performance of Macintosh and Airtraq™ laryngoscopes  S.K. Ndoko, R. Amathieu,
Sun D. A. , Warriner C. B. , Parsons D. G. , Klein R. , Umedaly H. S
Comparison of Macintosh, Truview EVO2®, Glidescope®, and Airwayscope® laryngoscope use in patients with cervical spine immobilization  M.A. Malik, C.H.
R.J. Parker, I.J. Rechner, T.J. Parke  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Association between the availability of videolaryngoscopes and the incidence of emergency surgical airway in the perioperative setting of a large academic.
Alternative intubation techniques vs Macintosh laryngoscopy in patients with cervical spine immobilization: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized.
Airway Scope and gum elastic bougie with Macintosh laryngoscope for tracheal intubation in patients with simulated restricted neck mobility  R. Komatsu,
Predictive value of the El-Ganzouri multivariate risk index for difficult tracheal intubation: a comparison of Glidescope® videolaryngoscopy and conventional.
Pentax-AWS, a new videolaryngoscope, is more effective than the Macintosh laryngoscope for tracheal intubation in patients with restricted neck movements:
Anaesthesia for spinal surgery in adults
Comparison of the laryngoscopy views with the size 1 Miller and Macintosh laryngoscope blades lifting the epiglottis or the base of the tongue in infants.
Magnetic resonance imaging study of the in vivo position of the extraglottic airway devices i-gel™ and LMA-Supreme™ in anaesthetized human volunteers 
Tracheal intubation using a Macintosh laryngoscope or a GlideScope® in 15 patients with cervical spine immobilization  F Agrò, G Barzoi, F Montecchia 
Comparison of the C-MAC®, Airtraq®, and Macintosh laryngoscopes in patients undergoing tracheal intubation with cervical spine immobilization  J. McElwain,
Comparison of the Glidescope®, the Pentax AWS®, and the Truview EVO2® with the Macintosh laryngoscope in experienced anaesthetists: a manikin study  M.A.
Topical anaesthesia of the airway using Trachlight™ and MADgic® atomizer in patients with predicted difficult tracheal intubation  F.S. Xue, Q.Y. Yang,
I.Y. Yang, S. Oraee, C. Viejo, H. Stern  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Efficacy of a new dual channel laryngeal mask airway, the LMA®Gastro™ Airway, for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy: a prospective observational study 
T. Asai  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Mind the gap when performing emergency front-of-neck access
Evaluation of a single preoperative dose of pregabalin for attenuation of postoperative pain after laparoscopic cholecystectomy  A. Agarwal, S. Gautam,
Mucosal pressure and oropharyngeal leak pressure with the ProSeal versus laryngeal mask airway in anaesthetized paralysed patients†  C. Keller, J. Brimacombe 
Modification of tracheal tubes
Expected difficult tracheal intubation: a prospective comparison of direct laryngoscopy and video laryngoscopy in 200 patients  A. Jungbauer, M. Schumann,
Respiratory failure after tracheal extubation in a patient with halo frame cervical spine immobilization—rescue therapy using the Combitube airway  M.
Changing body position alters the location of the spinal cord within the vertebral canal: a magnetic resonance imaging study  M.R.B. Ranger, G.J. Irwin,
The modified ventilating tube changer to facilitate tracheal intubation using the GlideScope® in patients with a limited mouth opening  F.S. Xue, Q.Y.
Videolaryngoscopy versus direct laryngoscopy for adult patients requiring tracheal intubation: a Cochrane Systematic Review†   S.R. Lewis, A.R. Butler,
Psychology of pain British Journal of Anaesthesia
Cardiovascular and arousal responses to laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation in patients with complete spinal cord injury  K.Y. Yoo, C.W. Jeong, S.J.
Different small-dose sufentanil blunting cardiovascular responses to laryngoscopy and intubation in children: a randomized, double-blind comparison†  
Randomized controlled trial of the Pentax AWS®, Glidescope®, and Macintosh laryngoscopes in predicted difficult intubation  M.A. Malik, R. Subramaniam,
Comparative study of topical anaesthesia with lidocaine 2% vs levobupivacaine 0.75% in cataract surgery  S.A. Fernández, E. Dios, J.C. Diz  British Journal.
V. Uppal, G. Fletcher, J. Kinsella  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Successful intubation using retrograde trans-tracheal illumination after laryngoscope light source failure  J Hudson, M Vu, E Vu  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Simulating face-to-face tracheal intubation of a trapped patient: a randomized comparison of the LMA Fastrach™, the GlideScope™, and the Airtraq™ laryngoscope 
W.A. Marchant, R. Fox  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
S Singh, J.E. Smith  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
New approach to anaesthetizing a patient at risk of pulmonary aspiration with a Montgomery T-tube in situ  K.M.A. Wouters, R. Byreddy, M. Gleeson, A.P.
Physiological effects of hyperchloraemia and acidosis
Tracheal intubation in patients with cervical spine immobilization: a comparison of the Airwayscope®, LMA CTrach®, and the Macintosh laryngoscopes  M.A.
FastrachTM tubes: modifying the design for use with the LMA CTrachTM?
Effects of tracheal tube orientation on the success of intubation through an intubating laryngeal mask airway: study in Mallampati class 3 or 4 patients 
D. M. Wong, A. Prabhu, S. Chakraborty, G. Tan, E. M. Massicotte, R
GlideScope® video laryngoscope: a randomized clinical trial in 203 paediatric patients†   J.-T. Kim, H.-S. Na, J.-Y. Bae, D.-W. Kim, H.-S. Kim, C.S. Kim,
Randomized comparison of the Pentax AirWay Scope and Macintosh laryngoscope for tracheal intubation in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea  M.K. Kim,
A. van Zundert, B. Pieters, V. Doerges, S. Gatt 
Changes in airway configuration with different head and neck positions using magnetic resonance imaging of normal airways: a new concept with possible.
Securing tracheal tubes in facial burns
G.J. Mar, M.J. Barrington, B.R. McGuirk  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
The effect of ephedrine on intubating conditions and haemodynamics during rapid tracheal intubation using propofol and rocuronium  M.D. Gopalakrishna,
Management of a known difficult airway in a morbidly obese patient with gross supraglottic oedema secondary to thyroid disease  M. Hariprasad, G.J. Smurthwaite 
Randomized clinical trial of the i-gel™ and Magill tracheal tube or single-use ILMA™ and ILMA™ tracheal tube for blind intubation in anaesthetized patients.
Tension enterothorax British Journal of Anaesthesia
Use of angulated video-intubation laryngoscope in children undergoing manual in-line neck stabilization  M. Weiss, K. Hartmann, J.E. Fischer, A.C. Gerber 
Translational medicine: cancer pain mechanisms and management
Inter-hemispheric cerebral oxygen saturation differences during thoracic surgery in lateral head positioning†  T.M. Hemmerling, R. Kazan, D. Bracco  British.
C. Verghese, B. Ramaswamy  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Use of a ProSeal™ laryngeal mask airway and a Ravussin cricothyroidotomy needle in the management of laryngeal and subglottic stenosis causing upper airway.
First clinical experience of tracheal intubation with the SensaScope®, a novel steerable semirigid video stylet  Biro P , Bättig U , Henderson J , Seifert.
T. -F. Lin, Y. -C. Yeh, F. -S. Lin, Y. -P. Wang, C. -J. Lin, W. -Z
Controlled hypotension for middle ear surgery: a comparison between remifentanil and magnesium sulphate†   J.-H. Ryu, I.-S. Sohn, S.-H. Do  British Journal.
Lung isolation in the morbidly obese patient: a comparison of a left-sided double-lumen tracheal tube with the Arndt® wire-guided blocker  J.H. Campos,
M. J. Sheen, S. -T. Ho, C. -H. Lee, Y. -C. Tsung, F. -L. Chang, S. -T
F. Neunhoeffer, T. Wahl, M. Hofbeck, H. Renk, M. Esslinger, M
A. Ahmed-Nusrath, J.L. Tong, J.E. Smith  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Presentation transcript:

Randomized cross-over comparison of cervical-spine motion with the AirWay Scope or Macintosh laryngoscope with in-line stabilization: a video-fluoroscopic study  K. Maruyama, T. Yamada, R. Kawakami, K. Hara  British Journal of Anaesthesia  Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages 563-567 (October 2008) DOI: 10.1093/bja/aen207 Copyright © 2008 British Journal of Anaesthesia Terms and Conditions

Fig 1 Photograph of the AWS®. A disposable polycarbonate introducer (INTLOCK®) is attached to the main unit, and the tracheal tube is placed in the side channel of the INTLOCK®. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2008 101, 563-567DOI: (10.1093/bja/aen207) Copyright © 2008 British Journal of Anaesthesia Terms and Conditions

Fig 2 Vertebral reference lines. The reference line for the occiput was the McGregor line, which joins the most dorsal and caudal parts of the occiput to the posterior hard palate. The reference line for the cervical segment C1 was an imaginary line running between the lower cortical margin of the anterior arch and the posterior arch. The reference lines for cervical segments C2–C4 were imaginary lines running between the anterior, inferior margin of the respective vertebral bodies and the lower cortical margin of the respective vertebral bodies and the lower cortical margin of the respective spinous processes. The AWS is in situ. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2008 101, 563-567DOI: (10.1093/bja/aen207) Copyright © 2008 British Journal of Anaesthesia Terms and Conditions

Fig 3 Cumulative movement of the upper cervical spine during T1 and T2. T1, time from mouth opening with the cross-finger manoeuvre to insertion of the AWS or Macintosh laryngoscope. T2, time from laryngoscopy to intubation. *P<0.01 vs AWS group. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2008 101, 563-567DOI: (10.1093/bja/aen207) Copyright © 2008 British Journal of Anaesthesia Terms and Conditions