Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is the most serious kind of the sleep-disordered breathing group, characterised by recurrent episodes of partial to complete obstruction of the upper airway resulting in inefficient alveolar gas exchange and desaturation\[1\]. It is a commonly encountered condition with a reported prevalence of 9-25% in the general population \[2\]. However, the majority of OSA patients presenting for surgery remain undiagnosed or untreated\[3\], contributing to a high rate of unexpected adverse airway outcome\[4\]. The various airway abnormalities represented by OSA include a large tongue, collapsible airway and crowding of the oropharyngeal structures, among others\[5\]. Accurate airway assessment should always be performed so as to provide appropriate planning and management of expected difficult intubation, but the common clinical screening tests (Mallampati score, inter-incisor distance, mento-hyoid distance, BMI, etc ) have shown low sensitivity and specificity with a limited predictive value, especially if only a single assessment method is used\[6\]. Ultrasonography could be a highly sensitive and specific tool for prediction of difficult intubation in OSA patients presented for elective surgery by measuring tongue base thickness, distance between lingual arteries, hyo-mental distance and condylar mobility.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
70
Tanta University hospitals
Tanta, Gharbya, Egypt
RECRUITINGultrasound parameters
evaluate the accuracy of the ultrasound parameters as predictors of difficult intubation in OSA patients in the perioperative period.
Time frame: preoperative assessment
which is better
\- To evaluate which is superior for assessment of difficult intubation in OSA patients, ultrasound or clinical tests.
Time frame: preoperative assessment
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