Intubation with an Airway Scope offered high success rates when tracheal intubation is required in a laterally positioned patient, according to a study published in the March 2011 issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia.
The study, titled "Airway Scope for Tracheal Intubation in the Lateral Position" and led by researchers at Cleveland Clinic, randomly assigned anesthetized adults to supine, left-lateral or right-lateral position. Laryngeal views were obtained in the designated position with a Macintosh laryngoscope, and patient tracheas were subsequently intubated with the Airway Scope.
The researchers also tested the hypothesis that the time required for intubation in right- and left-lateral positions is not increased by more than 10 seconds, compared with tracheal intubation in the supine position.
Both lateral positions offered worse laryngoscopic views than the supine position, but intubation with the Airway Scope still showed high success rates.
Read the abstract of the study in Anesthesia & Analgesia.
Read more on anesthesia:
-Changes to Epidural Doses Allow Movement Without Pain
-Anesthesiologist on the Move: Dr. Suwarna Bhide Deoskar Joins Essentia Health
-Drug Shortages Force California Facilities to Look for Alternatives
The study, titled "Airway Scope for Tracheal Intubation in the Lateral Position" and led by researchers at Cleveland Clinic, randomly assigned anesthetized adults to supine, left-lateral or right-lateral position. Laryngeal views were obtained in the designated position with a Macintosh laryngoscope, and patient tracheas were subsequently intubated with the Airway Scope.
The researchers also tested the hypothesis that the time required for intubation in right- and left-lateral positions is not increased by more than 10 seconds, compared with tracheal intubation in the supine position.
Both lateral positions offered worse laryngoscopic views than the supine position, but intubation with the Airway Scope still showed high success rates.
Read the abstract of the study in Anesthesia & Analgesia.
Read more on anesthesia:
-Changes to Epidural Doses Allow Movement Without Pain
-Anesthesiologist on the Move: Dr. Suwarna Bhide Deoskar Joins Essentia Health
-Drug Shortages Force California Facilities to Look for Alternatives