Training Requirements in Point of Care Ultrasonography of the Upper Airway: A Feasibility Study

Point-of-care ultrasonography of the upper airway can be a useful supplement to conventional pre-anesthetic clinical evaluations. However, the reliability of such examinations is highly operator-dependent and proper training in sonoanatomy and ultrasound operational skills are required. The objectiv...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of ultrasound in medicine 2023-11, Vol.42 (11), p.2513-2522
Hauptverfasser: Karakosta, Agathi, Pantazi, Danai, Margariti, Persefoni, Micha, Georgia, Samara, Evangelia, Tzimas, Petros
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Point-of-care ultrasonography of the upper airway can be a useful supplement to conventional pre-anesthetic clinical evaluations. However, the reliability of such examinations is highly operator-dependent and proper training in sonoanatomy and ultrasound operational skills are required. The objective of this study aims to assess the minimum training requirements for applying a predefined upper airway scanning protocol in healthy volunteers by anesthesia trainees. Twenty-two healthy volunteer members of the Operating Room staff participated in the study. A predefined scanning protocol that included the identification of specific structures (hyoid bone, vocal cords, thyrohyoid membrane/epiglottis/pre-epiglottic space, cricothyroid membrane, and thyroid gland), as well as the performance of specific measurements (distance from the hyoid bone to skin, anterior commissure to skin, epiglottis to skin, and thyroid isthmus to skin) was taught in a single-day training course. The trainees' competence was assessed after multiple scanning repetitions performed over a week. Mixed effects regression models were applied for the trainee-instructor differences in all ultrasound measurements. Cricothyroid membrane visualization had the lowest success rate (88%). Trainee-instructor differences were statistically significant for hyoid bone-to-skin (P 
ISSN:0278-4297
1550-9613
DOI:10.1002/jum.16284