Quantifying the Effective Cricoid Force to Occlude the Esophageal Entrance in Anesthetized and Muscle-Relaxed Children: A Videolaryngoscopy-Based Assessment - 29/05/26
, M Ramez Salem b, Munir Bamadhaj a, Aida Saifan c, Arjang Khorasani b, Jean-Xavier Mazoit d, Hussein Sadek e, Amr Addelaziz f, Nabil Bamadhaj g, Nebojsa Nick Knezevic bHighlights |
• | Cricoid force to close the esophagus in children varies with age, unlike the fixed 30 N that is routinely advised for adults. |
• | Age-specific cricoid force can safely occlude the esophageal entrance in anesthetized children without hindering intubation. |
• | These forces stay below levels that distort or obstruct the pediatric airway and remain far lower than the force advised for adults. |
Abstract |
Background |
When cricoid pressure was introduced in pediatric anesthesia, the cricoid force was not defined, leading pediatric anesthesiologists to question its necessity, effectiveness, and safety. We hypothesized that airway complications encountered in clinical practice may have resulted from the exertion of excessive cricoid force.
Methods |
Using a novel instrument, we measured cricoid force during Glidescope® videolaryngoscopy in three groups of 40 anesthetized children: Group 1 (3–5 years), Group 2 (6–8 years), and Group 3 (9–14 years). A biased-coin up-and-down design was employed to estimate the median force required to prevent the insertion of a suction catheter into the esophagus.
Results |
There were no instances of difficult endotracheal intubation. The median cricoid force required to prevent suction catheter insertion into the esophagus in 90% of patients was 4.85 Newton (N) (95% CI 4.12–7.34) in Group 1, 8.74 N (95% CI 8.30–9.73) in Group 2, and 13.0 N (95% CI 11.2–16.9) in Group 3.
Conclusions |
Age-appropriate cricoid force applied under videolaryngoscopic guidance effectively occludes the esophageal entrance without compromising endotracheal intubation. These forces are substantially lower than the thresholds known to cause airway distortion or obstruction in children and are lower than the force recommended for adults. These findings may have implications for the use of cricoid pressure as a component of the rapid sequence intubation (RSI) technique in children at risk of pulmonary aspiration.
Trial registration |
ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05290844).
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : 1-Age-appropriate cricoid force in children, 2-Cricoid force in children, 3-Prevention of regurgitation in pediatric patients, 3-Quantifying the cricoid force in children, 4-Rapid sequence induction in children
Plan
Vol 45 - N° 4
Article 101674- juillet 2026 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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