Tonsillitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Airway Management in Children Undergoing Adenotonsillectomies Under General Anesthesia; a Comparison of the Endotracheal Tube and the Laryngeal Mask Airway
Secure airway management is the basis of all anesthesiological practice. Of particular
importance is the securing of patients' airway passages when the surgical procedure itself
poses a threat to a patient's airway, as is the case in all procedures involving the upper
respiratory pathways. When adenoidectomies, tonsillectomies and combined
adenotonsillectomies are performed, blood from the surgical area will present a respiratory
threat to unsecured airways. The traditional opinion has been that endotracheal intubation
is the safest method of preventing aspiration.
The laryngeal mask was introduced in 1983 as an alternative to the endotracheal tube. In
1990, the flexible, reinforced laryngeal mask airway was introduced, intended for use during
surgical procedures involving the mouth and throat. The laryngeal mask airway has several
potential advantages over the endotracheal tube. It is inserted blindly, without
laryngoscopy. This leads to reduced oropharyngeal or laryngeal stimulation and injury, and
therefore minimal activation of respiratory and circulatory reflexes. The laryngeal mask
airway can be placed without the use of muscle relaxants, avoiding potential side effects
such as apnea, hyperkalemia and anaphylaxis. In addition the laryngeal mask airway can
remain in the throat until the patient awakes, virtually eliminating the danger of
postoperative aspiration.
Several international studies have described the advantages of the laryngeal mask airway
over endotracheal intubation during ear, nose and throat surgery in children. The general
impression is that there is a widespread routine implementation of the laryngeal mask
airway. In Norway, however, this practice has been limited. As far as we know, only Namsos
Hospital uses this procedure as its first choice. At Telemark Hospital we tested the use of
laryngeal mask airway on 150 patients between May and December 2006. The results so far have
been promising, and we have had no serious complications.
Hypothesis:
In children undergoing adenotonsillectomies, a laryngeal mask airway provides greater
patient satisfaction (judged by reduced pain, nausea and vomiting) and greater effectivity
(judged by reduced time in surgery), compared with the endotracheal tube. The laryngeal mask
provides as much as or greater secure airway management measured by desaturations/Sp02<92%
and/or use of suxamethonium and bronchiolytic drugs.
Registration:
Preoperative: Age, height, weight, medication, asthma/allergy, possible current respiratory
infection
Peroperative: Type of procedure, tube size/laryngeal mask, type of tongue blade,
highest/lowest SpO2, highest/lowest ET CO2, highest/lowest pulse, length of surgery, total
operating room time, operator, medication. Reason must be given if converting from laryngeal
mask to tube; lack of visibility for operator, laryngeal mask not possible to place,
unacceptable leakage before placing tongue blade, occlusion after placement of tongue blade.
Postoperative: Pain judged by need for opiates (VAS, crying, agitation, tachycardia), nausea
judged by gagging/vomiting, total time in recovery, rebleeding judged by reoperation.
Anesthesia:
Induction: Alfentanil 20 microg/kg body weight Propofol 3-4 mg/kg body weight Or:
Sevoflurane/N2O mask induction with MAC 1-2
Maintenance: Alfentanil 5-10 microg/kg body weight every 8-10 minutes Sevoflurane/N2O
equivalent to 1-1.5 MAC Acetaminophen supp 40 mg/kg body weight, max 2 g. Dexamethasone
0.15mg/kg body weight Xylocaine 1mg/kg body weight
Emergence: Morphine 100-200 mikrog/kg body weight
Postoperative: Morphine 50-100 microg/kg body weight
Post-discharge: Acetaminophen tbl 15 mg/kg body weight x 3 Or: Acetaminophen supp 20 mg/kg
body weight x 3
Patient booklet:
A patient booklet will be produced for each patient. The booklet will contain only the
patient's initials, age and research number. After the booklets are filled out, they will be
stored in a locked facility by one of the examining physicians, and the code to the
patient's name will be stored and locked separately by one of the researchers. The code will
be destroyed at the end of the research study.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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