Previous difficult airway management is the most accurate predictor of future difficulty. Consistent documentation is paramount for future airway planning, but requires reliable, reproducible and easily accessible information. Currently, anaesthesia alert cards are often based on analogue hard copies while they lack a clinically meaningful core data set allowing structured reproducible documentation and risk estimation. Further, existing alert cards are often inconsistently used and clear triggers for issuing of airway alert cards are widely undefined. The FingAIRprint project aims to develop a justifiable core data set using a data-driven approach in patients undergoing tracheal intubation with videolaryngoscopy or direct laryngoscopy, that is intended to be used for documentation of digital airway alerts.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,785
Department of Anesthesiology, Center for Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
Hamburg, Germany
Difficult airway alert
Documented by the airway operator following tracheal intubation (y/n)
Time frame: 1 hour
Recommendation for awake tracheal intubation
Recommendation for future airway planning documented by the airway operator after tracheal intubation (y/n)
Time frame: 1 hour
Recommendation for camera-assisted tracheal intubation
Recommendation for future airway planning documented by the airway operator after tracheal intubation (y/n)
Time frame: 1 hour
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