Pre-hospital intubation is often required in sub-optimal conditions, such as in patients lying on the ground. Direct laryngoscopy and intubation of a patient lying supine on the ground is difficult because the intubator's head is far above the head of the patient. It is thus tricky to align the intubator's visual axis with the patient's tracheal axis. The Airway Scope is a new laryngoscope designed to facilitate intubation without requiring alignment of the oral, pharyngeal, and tracheal axes. We thus tested the hypothesis that the intubation with the Airway Scope is faster than the Macintosh laryngoscope in subjects lying on the ground.
Adult surgical patients were enrolled. Following anesthesia induction and muscle relaxation, direct laryngoscopy was performed as usual and airway characteristics noted. Patients were randomly assigned to tracheal intubation by either the Airway Scope (n=50) or the Macintosh laryngoscope (n=50). Intubation was performed from a table positioned at the height as the operating table, thus simulating intubating on the ground. Overall intubation success rate, time required for intubation, the number of attempts required for successful intubation, and airway complications related to intubation were recorded.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
100
Tracheal intubation by Airway Scope
Tracheal intubation by Macintosh Laryngoscope
Kosei Hospital,.
Tokyo, Japan
Intubation Time
For the case with number of intubation attempt no more than 3, intubation time was defined as the total time of individual intubation attempt. Otherwise, intubation was defined as a failure and excluded from the calculation of intubation time.
Time frame: The time from picking up the Airway Scope or Macintosh laryngoscope to confirmation of tracheal intubation by capnography.
Overall Intubation Success Rate
Time frame: Intubation period
Number of Intubation Attempts
Time frame: Intubation period
Incidence of Intubation Complications
Including mucosal trauma, dental injury, lip injury, hypoxia (SPO2\<95%) and Esophageal intubation
Time frame: Intubation period
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