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Effect of cricoid pressure on the ease of fibrescope-aided tracheal intubation

✍ Scribed by T. Asai; K. Murao; S. Johmura; K. Shingu


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
198 KB
Volume
57
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2409

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✦ Synopsis


Summary We studied the reasons for difficulty with tracheal intubation over a fibrescope, and whether cricoid pressure facilitated intubation, in 50 patients. After induction of anaesthesia and neuromuscular blockade in 10 patients (phase 1), we attempted to clarify the reasons for difficulty in advancing a tracheal tube over an orally‐inserted fibrescope, by observing through another fibrescope that was inserted nasally into the pharynx. In the next 40 patients (phase 2), we studied the effect of cricoid pressure on the success rate of tracheal intubation over the fibrescope. After a fibrescope (with a tracheal tube over it) had been inserted orally into the trachea, patients were randomly allocated to receive either criocoid pressure or sham pressure, and the success rate of intubation within 60 s was assessed. In phase 1, the tube was advanced into the trachea without difficulty in three of 10 patients. In the remaining seven patients, the tube impacted on the epiglottis in one patient and on the arytenoid cartilage in another two patients, and the tube migrated into the hypopharynx in the remaining four patients. In phase 2, tracheal intubation was successful within 60 s in seven of 21 patients (33%) without cricoid pressure, compared with 12 of 19 patients (63%) when cricoid pressure was applied (95% CI for difference 2–59%; p = 0.04). We conclude that cricoid pressure facilitates fibrescope‐aided tracheal intubation.


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