Impact of universal use of a hyperangulated videolaryngoscope as the first option for all intubations in the ICU: A prospective before-after study

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. A prospective bef...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anaesthesia critical care & pain medicine 2024-10, Vol.43 (5), p.101402, Article 101402
Hauptverfasser: Taboada, Manuel, Cariñena, Agustín, García, Fátima, Alonso, Sara, Iraburu, Rocío, De Miguel, Manuela, Barreiro, Laura, Dos Santos, Laura, Caruezo, Valentín, Muniategui, Ignacio, Aneiros, Francisco, Otero, Pablo, Álvarez, Julián, Seoane-Pillado, Teresa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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. 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. 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 
ISSN:2352-5568
2352-5568
DOI:10.1016/j.accpm.2024.101402