Intubation, Endotracheal Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Comparison of Laryngoscopy Techniques Using the Video Laryngoscope and the Traditional Macintosh Laryngoscope in Patients Who May be Difficult to Intubate
The purpose of this study is to determine if the Video Laryngoscope (VL) is a useful instrument in patients at risk for difficult intubation. We will compare this device to the traditional Macintosh Laryngoscope.
Despite improvements made to the traditional laryngoscope blade since its invention,
occasionally intubation of the trachea cannot be accomplished with facility, even in
patients with anatomy that does not predict difficult intubation. It is estimated that
endotracheal intubation is performed on some 8 million patients per year in the United
States. Of these endotracheal intubations, approximately 80% are performed by direct
laryngoscopy with transoral placement of the endotracheal tube (ET) into the trachea. There
is fairly uniform reporting of the incidence of failed intubation in the literature; it
occurs in approximately 0.05% or 1:2230 of surgical patients and in approximately 0.13% to
0.35%, or 1:750 to 1:280, of the obstetric patients. The incidence of unsuspected difficult
intubation is estimated to be higher at 3%. One factor that contributes to difficult
intubation is poor visualization.
The VL is designed to optimize visualization by presenting to the operator an enlarged video
image of airway structures. In contrast, using conventional laryngoscopy, anesthesiologists
have only a "keyhole" view of the airway structures; a view that may be further obscured
during attempts to pass the ET.
The VL consists of a laryngoscope handle and Macintosh blade that have been modified to
provide a video image of airway structures on a screen, which can be conveniently located
directly in front of the anesthesiologist. A micro video module is contained in the modified
handle. An image/light bundle is introduced into the standard blade. This system has been
previously tested in which the consensus was that the device is extremely easy to learn to
use because most anesthesiologists are familiar with the use of the Macintosh blade. It has
also been useful in the instruction of laryngoscopy by non-anesthesiologists.
There are several potential advantages of a video image in the context of direct
laryngoscopy. The system provides high quality video images that are enlarged on the video
monitor for easier visualization. If laryngeal manipulation is required to improve
visualization of laryngeal structures, the intubator and the person assisting can coordinate
movements as they observe, simultaneously, the image on the video monitor. With the video
image projected from the distal end of the laryngoscope blade, laryngeal structures are kept
in view as the ET is passed through the oropharynx into the trachea.
Comparison: Video Laryngoscope as a conduit for possible difficult intubation compared to
the traditional Macintosh blade.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind
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