Impact of universal use of a hyperangulated videolaryngoscope as the first option for all intubations in the ICU: A prospective before-after study - 27/09/24
, Agustín Cariñena a, Fátima García a, Sara Alonso a, Rocío Iraburu a, Manuela De Miguel a, Laura Barreiro a, Laura Dos Santos a, Valentín Caruezo a, Ignacio Muniategui a, Francisco Aneiros a, Pablo Otero a, Julián Álvarez a, Teresa Seoane-Pillado a, bAbstract |
Background |
Tracheal intubation in ICU is associated with high incidence of difficult intubations. The study aimed to investigate whether the “universal” use of a hyperangulated videolaryngoscope would increase the frequency of “easy intubation” in ICU patients compared to direct laryngoscopy.
Methods |
A prospective before-after study was conducted. The pre-interventional period (36 months) involved tracheal intubations using direct laryngoscopy as the first intubation option. In the interventional period (18 months) a hyperangulated videolaryngoscope was the first intubation option. The primary outcome was the percentage of patients with “easy intubation” defined as intubation on the first attempt and easy laryngoscopy (modified Cormack-Lehane glottic view of I-IIa). Secondary outcomes included difficult laryngoscopy, operator technical difficulty, and complications.
Results |
We enrolled 407 patients, 273 in non-interventional period, and 134 in interventional period. Tracheal intubation in the interventional period was associated with higher incidence of “easy intubation” (92.5%) compared with the non-interventional period (75.8%); P < 0.001)). Glottic visualization improved in the interventional period, with a reduced incidence of difficult laryngoscopy (1.5% vs. 22.5%; P < 0.001). The proportion of first-success rate intubation was 92.5% in the interventional period, and 87.8% in the non-interventional period (P = 0.147). Moderate and severe technical difficulty of intubation reported decreased in the interventional period (6% vs. 17.6%; P < 0.001). There was no significant difference between both periods in the incidence of complications.
Conclusion |
“Universal” use of hyperangulated videolaryngoscopy for tracheal intubation in patients admitted in ICU improves the percentage of easy intubation compared to direct laryngoscopy.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Intubation, Critical care, Complications, Airway management, Videolaryngoscopy, First-attempt success rate
Plan
Vol 43 - N° 5
Article 101402- octobre 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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