This research project examines the effectiveness of different video laryngoscopes in a out-of-hospital emergency intubation. Since in preclinical airway management severe incidents with esophageal failures of intubation may partly happen or rather endotracheal Intubation may completely fail, it is of great importance to evaluate alternative ways of endotracheal intubation in out-of-hospital emergency medicine. Video laryngoscopy has been proven in everyday clinical practice and may clinically be superior in most situations when compared to endotracheal Intubation using a conventional laryngoscope. No data exist, if different video laryngoscope types perform differently in the out-of-hospital setting. The investigators hypothesize that there would be no difference with regard to intubation time, intubation success, and intubation morbidity between different models of video laryngoscopes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
182
Tracheal Intubation with the assigned video laryngoscope
Klinikum LDW / NEF Bremen Süd
Bremen, Germany
Uniklinikum Greifswald / DRF Luftrettung
Greifswald, Germany
Uniklinikum Kiel / DRF Luftrettung
Rendsburg, Germany
Intubation success
Time frame: Immediately after intubation
Intubation on first attempt
Time frame: Immediately after intubation
Intubation time
Time frame: Immediately after intubation
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