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DIFFICULT AIRWAY MANAGEMENT

DIFFICULT AIRWAY MANAGEMENT. PP CHEN Department of Anaesthesia & Operating Services Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital. What is a difficult airway?. Difficult manual ventilation Difficult tracheal intubation. Adverse effects of difficult airway. Hypoxia Cardiac arrest Encephalopathy

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DIFFICULT AIRWAY MANAGEMENT

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  1. DIFFICULT AIRWAY MANAGEMENT PP CHEN Department of Anaesthesia & Operating Services Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital

  2. What is a difficult airway? • Difficult manual ventilation • Difficult tracheal intubation

  3. Adverse effects of difficult airway • Hypoxia • Cardiac arrest • Encephalopathy • Other organs involvement • Aspiration pneumonitis

  4. Predicting difficult airway & tracheal intubation • Limited neck (C-spine) movement • Receding chin (mandible) • Prominent maxilla • Short, muscular, obese neck • Limited mouth opening • Bucked teeth, missing teeth with gaps • Large tongue • High arch palate • High anterior larynx

  5. Mallampati Grading • Samsoon & Young modification • Grade 1 Faucial pillar & uvula, soft palate all seen • Grade 2 Faucial pillar & uvula masked by base of tongue • Grade 3 Soft palate, base of uvula seen • Grade 4 Even soft palate not seen

  6. TM Distance > 6.5cm = easy 6-6.5cm = difficult <6cm = impossible

  7. Wilson risk score • Weight • Head & neck movement • Jaw movement • Receding mandible • Bucked teeth • Risk score 0,1,2 for each category

  8. Predicting difficult airway & tracheal intubation • Morbid obesity, pregnancy • Ankylosing spondylitis • Trauma eg C-spine, facial injuries • Burns to face & neck with contractures • Postradiotherapy • Congenital eg Pierre Robin syndrome • Inhalational burn injury • Infection eg epiglotitis, dental, quinsy • Neoplasm • Endocrine eg thyroid enlargement

  9. Managing manual ventilation • Triple manouevre • Head tilt • Chin lift • Jaw thrust

  10. Preparation for Tracheal intubation 1 • Prepare and check • intubation equipment • Laryngoscopes, ETTs (3 sizes), guides (stylet, bougie), syringe, tie or sticky tape, scissor, lubricant • suction device • Yankauer sucker, suction catheter, suction pressure • oxygen supply & ventilation equipment • manual resuscitator, facemasks, airways

  11. Preparation for tracheal intubation 2 • Establish iv access • Preoxygenate patient • Prepare drugs for anaesthesia • Choices • Thiopentone, Propofol, Etomidate, Midazolam, Ketamine • Suxamethonium, Cisatracurium, Atracurium, Rocuronium, Vecuronium, Pancuronium • Fentanyl, other opioids

  12. Positioning for tracheal intubation • Sniffing position • Flexion of cervical spine • Extension of atlanto-occipital joint

  13. Lehane & Cormack Laryngeal Classification

  14. How to deal with difficult airway?

  15. Airway accessories: Stylet, Gum Elastic Bougie

  16. Awake Fibreoptic intubation Using Local anaesthetic to intubate tracheal via mouth or nose before induction of anaesthesia

  17. Berman Airway Ovassapian Airway

  18. McCoy

  19. Other laryngoscopes • Bullard laryngoscope • Upsher scope • WuScope

  20. Light Wand

  21. Jet ventilation

  22. Connection to trans-tracheal cannula

  23. Combitube

  24. Laryngeal tube

  25. Mx of difficult intubation 1 • Inability to open mouth • Give more relaxant or wait longer for it to work if inadequate relaxation • Perform intubation under LA + sedation if mechanical obstruction to mouth opening • Dental gaps (as the result of removed denture) may make it difficult to visualise vocal cords • Use gauze roll to fill gaps • Short, fat neck, large breast in the obese or pregnant patient • Awake fibreoptic intubation • Polio blade

  26. Mx of difficult intubation 2 • Vocal cord partially visible • Make sure head & neck are in optimal (sniffing) position • Push on front of neck to make larynx more posterior • Use stylet, gum elastic bougie • Vocal cord not visible but epiglottis visible • Use gum elastic bougie • Consider fibreoptic intubation if difficult with bougie • Epiglottis not visible • Use long laryngoscope blade • Fibreoptic intubation

  27. Failure to Intubate Call for HELP Mask Ventilation Adequate? YES NO Intubation Choices LMA TTJV Combitube FAIL SUCCEED SUCCEED FAIL Surgical Airway Surgical Airway Intubation Choices CONFIRM Difficult Airway Algorithm

  28. The End

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