Predictors of difficult videolaryngoscopy with GlideScope® or C-MAC® with D-blade: secondary analysis from a large comparative videolaryngoscopy trial.
Aziz. M F MF; Bayman. E O EO; Van Tienderen. M M MM; Todd. M M MM; Brambrink. A M AM
Key Findings
- Supine sniffing head position raises difficulty compared to neutral
- Otolaryngologic or cardiac surgeries are riskier than general surgery
- Attending anesthesiologists have higher difficulty odds than supervised residents
- Smaller mouth opening slightly increases difficulty
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, the findings aren’t directly useful, but they highlight that patient positioning and provider experience matter in airway procedures. Adjusting head position to neutral and ensuring an experienced practitioner performs intubation can reduce trouble, though this has limited relevance to everyday health optimization.
Summary
This study looked at why using a special video camera to help put a breathing tube in patients can sometimes be hard. It found that certain patient positions, types of surgery, who does the intubation, and how wide the mouth opens affect the difficulty.
Abstract
Tracheal intubation using acute-angle videolaryngoscopy achieves high success rates, but is not without difficulty. We aimed to determine predictors of 'difficult videolaryngoscopy'. We performed a secondary analysis of a data set (n=1100) gathered from a multicentre prospective randomized controlled trial of patients for whom difficult direct laryngoscopy was anticipated and who were intubated with one of two videolaryngoscopy devices (GlideScope(®) or C-MAC(®) with D-blade). 'Difficult videolaryngoscopy' was defined as 'first intubation time >60 s' or 'first attempt intubation failure'. A multivariate logistic regression model along with stepwise model selection techniques was performed to determine independent predictors of difficult videolaryngoscopy. Of 1100 patients, 301 were identified as difficult videolaryngoscopies. By univariate analysis, head and neck position, provider, type of surgery, and mouth opening were associated with difficult videolaryngoscopy (P<0.05). According to the multivariate logistic regression model, characteristics associated with greater risk for difficult videolaryngoscopy were as follows: (i) head and neck position of 'supine sniffing' vs 'supine neutral' {odds ratio (OR) 1.63, 95% confidence interval (CI) [1.14, 2.31]}; (ii) undergoing otolaryngologic or cardiac surgery vs general surgery (OR 1.89, 95% CI [1.19, 3.01] and OR 6.13, 95% CI [1.85, 20.37], respectively); (iii) intubation performed by an attending anaesthestist vs a supervised resident (OR 1.83, 95% CI [1.14, 2.92]); and (iv) small mouth opening (OR 1.18, 95% CI [1.02, 1.36]). This secondary analysis of an existing data set indicates four covariates associated with difficult acute-angle videolaryngoscopy, of which patient position and provider level are modifiable.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-07-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1093/bja/aew128
55
21