401 resultados para Intratracheal intubation
Resumo:
La prise en charge des voies aériennes est un aspect majeur de l'anesthésie dont le défaut de gestion reste la première cause de mortalité per-anesthésique. La fibroscopie reste à l'heure actuelle une technique clé pour la gestion des situations d'intubation difficiles, mais les fibroscopes standards réutilisables sont couteux, fragiles et doivent être nettoyés et désinfectés entre chaque utilisation. L'apparition sur le marché de l'Ambu ®aScope?2, vidéoscope souple à usage unique pourrait servir d'alternative si ses capacités d'intubation dans des situations cliniques difficiles étaient démontrées. Plusieurs études existaient démontrant l'efficacité de cet appareil sur des mannequins en situation standard ou difficile simulée, mais aucune n'avait testé son efficacité dans des situations difficiles sur patients réels, l'expérience dans se domaine se limitant à quelques case reports. Le but de cette étude était de comparer l'Ambu ®aScope?2 au fibroscope conventionnel dans des situations d'intubation difficiles sur patients réels. Après leur accord, 100 patients prévus pour une chirurgie élective nécessitant une intubation oro-trachéale ont été répartis de façon aléatoire en deux groupes homogènes de 50. La difficulté d'intubation était induite par la mise en place d'une minerve semi-rigide après anesthésie générale, empêchant ainsi toute mobilisation cervicale et limitant grandement l'ouverture de bouche. Les points de comparaisons étaient : Succès ou échec d'intubation, temps nécessaire pour la procédure, difficulté subjective du geste et qualité de vision des structures anatomiques. Tous les patients ont été intubés avec succès dans les deux groupes dans des délais tout à fait satisfaisant. Cependant, le temps nécessaire à l'obtention d'un positionnement correct du tube dans la trachée était significativement plus long avec l'Ambu ®aScope?2. Par ailleurs, la qualité de vision, tout en restant suffisante pour permettre l'intubation était globalement moins bonne avec l'appareil à usage unique. Quand à la difficulté subjective du geste, elle était plus souvent classée intermédiaire ou difficile dans ce groupe, sans pour autant que la différence soit significative. Les difficultés étaient principalement dues à un manque de mobilité de la partie flexible, l'absence de canal d'aspiration des sécrétions et une lentille de moins bonne qualité, troublant la vision au contacte de la salive. Bien que le taux de succès des intubations soit identique dans les deux groupes, il est probable que la solide expérience de l'anesthésiste en matière de fibroscopie ait permis de contourner les conditions plus difficiles du groupe de l'Ambu ®aScope?2 et ses performances techniques inférieures. Il est donc difficile de le recommander comme alternative équivalentes au fibroscope conventionnel pour les diverses situations d'intubation difficiles que l'on peut rencontre en clinique.
Resumo:
Introduction: Difficult tracheal intubation remains a constant and significant source of morbidity and mortality in anaesthetic practice. Insufficient airway assessment in the preoperative period continues to be a major cause of unanticipated difficult intubation. Although many risk factors have already been identified, preoperative airway evaluation is not always regarded as a standard procedure and the respective weight of each risk factor remains unclear. Moreover the predictive scores available are not sensitive, moderately specific and often operator-dependant. In order to improve the preoperative detection of patients at risk for difficult intubation, we developed a system for automated and objective evaluation of morphologic criteria of the face and neck using video recordings and advanced techniques borrowed from face recognition. Method and results: Frontal video sequences were recorded in 5 healthy volunteers. During the video recording, subjects were requested to perform maximal flexion-extension of the neck and to open wide the mouth with tongue pulled out. A robust and real-time face tracking system was then applied, allowing to automatically identify and map a grid of 55 control points on the face, which were tracked during head motion. These points located important features of the face, such as the eyebrows, the nose, the contours of the eyes and mouth, and the external contours, including the chin. Moreover, based on this face tracking, the orientation of the head could also be estimated at each frame of the video sequence. Thus, we could infer for each frame the pitch angle of the head pose (related to the vertical rotation of the head) and obtain the degree of head extension. Morphological criteria used in the most frequent cited predictive scores were also extracted, such as mouth opening, degree of visibility of the uvula or thyreo-mental distance. Discussion and conclusion: Preliminary results suggest the high feasibility of the technique. The next step will be the application of the same automated and objective evaluation to patients who will undergo tracheal intubation. The difficulties related to intubation will be then correlated to the biometric characteristics of the patients. The objective in mind is to analyze the biometrics data with artificial intelligence algorithms to build a highly sensitive and specific predictive test.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility and effects of non-invasive pressure support ventilation (NIV) on the breathing pattern in infants developing respiratory failure after extubation. DESIGN: Prospective pilot clinical study; each patient served as their own control. SETTING: A nine-bed paediatric intensive care unit of a tertiary university hospital. PATIENTS: Six patients (median age 5 months, range 0.5-7 months; median weight 4.2 kg, range 3.8-5.1 kg) who developed respiratory failure after extubation. INTERVENTIONS: After a period of spontaneous breathing (SB), children who developed respiratory failure were treated with NIV. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Measurements included clinical dyspnoea score (DS), blood gases and oesophageal pressure recordings, which were analysed for respiratory rate (RR), oesophageal inspiratory pressure swing (dPes) and oesophageal pressure-time product (PTPes). All data were collected during both periods (SB and NIV). When comparing NIV with SB, DS was reduced by 44% (P < 0.001), RR by 32% (P < 0.001), dPes by 45% (P < 0.01) and PTPes by 57% (P < 0.001). A non-significant trend for decrease in PaCO(2) was observed. CONCLUSION: In these infants, non-invasive pressure support ventilation with turbine flow generator induced a reduction of breathing frequency, dPes and PTPes, indicating reduced load of the inspiratory muscles. NIV can be used with some benefits in infants with respiratory failure after extubation.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: Before a patient can be connected to a mechanical ventilator, the controls of the apparatus need to be set up appropriately. Today, this is done by the intensive care professional. With the advent of closed loop controlled mechanical ventilation, methods will be needed to select appropriate start up settings automatically. The objective of our study was to test such a computerized method which could eventually be used as a start-up procedure (first 5-10 minutes of ventilation) for closed-loop controlled ventilation. DESIGN: Prospective Study. SETTINGS: ICU's in two adult and one children's hospital. PATIENTS: 25 critically ill adult patients (age > or = 15 y) and 17 critically ill children selected at random were studied. INTERVENTIONS: To stimulate 'initial connection', the patients were disconnected from their ventilator and transiently connected to a modified Hamilton AMADEUS ventilator for maximally one minute. During that time they were ventilated with a fixed and standardized breath pattern (Test Breaths) based on pressure controlled synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation (PCSIMV). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Measurements of airway flow, airway pressure and instantaneous CO2 concentration using a mainstream CO2 analyzer were made at the mouth during application of the Test-Breaths. Test-Breaths were analyzed in terms of tidal volume, expiratory time constant and series dead space. Using this data an initial ventilation pattern consisting of respiratory frequency and tidal volume was calculated. This ventilation pattern was compared to the one measured prior to the onset of the study using a two-tailed paired t-test. Additionally, it was compared to a conventional method for setting up ventilators. The computer-proposed ventilation pattern did not differ significantly from the actual pattern (p > 0.05), while the conventional method did. However the scatter was large and in 6 cases deviations in the minute ventilation of more than 50% were observed. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis of standardized Test Breaths allows automatic determination of an initial ventilation pattern for intubated ICU patients. While this pattern does not seem to be superior to the one chosen by the conventional method, it is derived fully automatically and without need for manual patient data entry such as weight or height. This makes the method potentially useful as a start up procedure for closed-loop controlled ventilation.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Tracheal intubation may be more difficult in morbidly obese (MO) patients than in the non-obese. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinically if the use of the Video Intubation Unit (VIU), a video-optical intubation stylet, could improve the laryngoscopic view compared with the standard Macintosh laryngoscope in this specific population. METHODS: We studied 40 MO patients (body mass index >35 kg/m(2)) scheduled for bariatric surgery. Each patient had a conventional laryngoscopy and a VIU inspection. The laryngoscopic grades (LG) using the Cormack and Lehane scoring system were noted and compared. Thereafter, the patients were randomised to be intubated with one of the two techniques. In one group, the patients were intubated with the help of the VIU and in the control group, tracheal intubation was performed conventionally. The duration of intubation, as well as the minimal SpO(2) achieved during the procedure, were measured. RESULTS: Patient characteristics were similar in both groups. Seventeen patients had a direct LG of 2 or 3 (no patient had a grade of 4). Out of these 17 patients, the LG systematically improved with the VIU and always attained grade 1 (P<0.0001). The intubation time was shorter within the VIU group, but did not attain significance. There was no difference in the SpO(2) post-intubation. CONCLUSION: In MO patients, the use of the VIU significantly improves the visualisation of the larynx, thereby improving the intubation conditions.
Resumo:
Fibreoptic intubation remains a key technique for the management of difficult intubation. We randomly compared the second generation single-use Ambu(®) aScope? 2 videoscope with a standard re-usable flexible intubating fibrescope in 50 tracheal intubations in patients with a difficult airway simulated by a semirigid collar. All patients' tracheas were intubated successfully with the aScope 2 or the re-usable fibrescope. The median (IQR [range]) time to intubate was significantly longer with the aScope 2 70 (55-97 [41?-226]) s vs 50 (40-59 [27-175]) s, p = 0.0003) due to an increased time to see the carina. Quality of vision was significantly lower with the aScope 2 (excellent 24 (48%) vs 49 (98%), p = 0.0001; good 22 (44%) vs 1 (2%), p = 0.0001; poor 4 (8%) vs 0, p = 0.12) but with no difference in the subjective ease to intubate (easy score of 31 (62%) vs 38 (76%), p = 0.19; intermediate 12 (24%) vs 7 (14%), p = 0.31; difficult 7 (14%) vs 5 (5%), p = 0.76). The longer times to intubate and the poorer scores for quality of vision do not support the use of the single-use aScope 2 videoscope as an alternative to the re-usable fibrescope.
Resumo:
Delayed recovery has been advocated to limit the postoperative stress linked to awakening from anesthesia, but data on this subject are lacking. In this study, we measured oxygen consumption (V(O2)) and plasma catecholamine concentrations as markers of postoperative stress. We tested the hypothesis that delayed recovery and extubation would attenuate metabolic changes after intracranial surgery. Thirty patients were included in a prospective, open study and were randomized into two groups. In Group I, the patients were tracheally extubated as soon as possible after surgery. In Group II, the patients were sedated with propofol for 2 h after surgery. V(O2), catecholamine concentration, mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate (HR) were measured during anesthesia, at extubation, and 30 min after extubation. V(O2) and noradrenaline on extubation and mean V(O2) during recovery were significantly higher in Group II than in Group I (V(O2) for Group I: preextubation 215 +/- 46 mL/min, recovery 198 +/- 38 mL/min; for Group II: preextubation 320 +/- 75 mL/min, recovery 268 +/- 49 mL/min; noradrenaline on extubation for Group I: 207 +/- 76 pg/mL, for Group II: 374 +/- 236 pg/ mL). Extubation induced a significant increase in MAP. MAP, HR, and adrenaline values were not statistically different between groups. In conclusion, delayed recovery after neurosurgery cannot be recommended as a mechanism of limiting the metabolic and hemodynamic consequences from emergence from general anesthesia. IMPLICATIONS: In this study, we tested the hypothesis that delayed recovery after neurosurgery would attenuate the consequences of recovery from general anesthesia. As markers of stress, oxygen consumption and noradrenaline blood levels were higher after delayed versus early recovery. Thus, delayed recovery cannot be recommended as a mechanism of limiting the metabolic and hemodynamic consequences from emergence after neurosurgery.
Resumo:
Benzodiazepine (BDZ), a widely recognized first-line status epilepticus (SE) treatment, may lead to respiratory depression. This cohort study investigates the effect of BDZ doses in SE patients in terms of morbidity and mortality. It considers incident SE episodes from a prospective registry (2009-2012), comparing patients receiving standard BDZ dose to those receiving exceeding doses (>30% above recommended dose), in terms of likelihood to receive intubation, morbidity, and mortality. Duration of hospitalization was assessed for subjects needing intubation for airways protection (not for refractory SE treatment) versus matched subjects not admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). We identified 29 subjects receiving "excessive" and 173 "standard" BDZ dose; 45% of the overtreated patients were intubated for airways protection, but only 8% in the standard-dose group (p < 0.001). However, both groups presented similar clinical outcomes: 50% returned to baseline, 40% acquired a new handicap, and 10% died. Orotracheal intubation due to airways protection was associated with significantly longer hospitalization (mean 2 weeks vs. 1 week, p = 0.008). In conclusion, although administration of excessive BDZ doses in SE treatment does not seem to influence outcome, it is related to higher respiratory depression risk and longer hospitalization, potentially exposing patients to additional complications and costs.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Video-laryngoscopes are marketed for intubation in difficult airway management. They provide a better view of the larynx and may facilitate tracheal intubation, but there is no adequately powered study comparing different types of video-laryngoscopes in a difficult airway scenario or in a simulated difficult airway situation. METHODS/DESIGN: The objective of this trial is to evaluate and to compare the clinical performance of three video-laryngoscopes with a guiding channel for intubation (Airtraq?, A. P. Advance?, King Vision?) and three video-laryngoscopes without an integrated tracheal tube guidance (C-MAC?, GlideScope?, McGrath?) in a simulated difficult airway situation in surgical patients. The working hypothesis is that each video-laryngoscope provides at least a 90% first intubation success rate (lower limit of the 95% confidence interval >0.9). It is a prospective, patient-blinded, multicenter, randomized controlled trial in 720 patients who are scheduled for elective surgery under general anesthesia, requiring tracheal intubation at one of the three participating hospitals. A difficult airway will be created using an extrication collar and taping the patients' head on the operating table to substantially reduce mouth opening and to minimize neck movement. Tracheal intubation will be performed with the help of one of the six devices according to randomization. Insertion success, time necessary for intubation, Cormack-Lehane grade and percentage of glottic opening (POGO) score at laryngoscopy, optimization maneuvers required to aid tracheal intubation, adverse events and technical problems will be recorded. Primary outcome is intubation success at first attempt. DISCUSSION: We will simulate the difficult airway and evaluate different video-laryngoscopes in this highly realistic and clinically challenging scenario, independently from manufacturers of the devices. Because of the sufficiently powered multicenter design this study will deliver important and cutting-edge results that will help clinicians decide which device to use for intubation of the expected and unexpected difficult airway. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01692535.
Resumo:
Résumant mon travail de thèse, l'article qui suit décrit un nouveau modèle animal servant à étudier l'impact combiné d'une ventilation mécanique (VM), d'une oxygénothérapie et d'une inflammation sur des poumons immatures. Cette étude permet, pour la première fois, de mesurer l'expression de gènes à distance d'une VM pour en analyser la cinétique. La VM représente un traitement intégral dans la prise en charge de prématurés. Sauvant des vies, elle est cependant non-physiologique et décrite comme nocive à court et à long terme, empêchant le bon développement pulmonaire. Nombreuses études se sont intéressées à l'impact immédiat de la VM sur les poumons, mais il n'existe à ce jour aucun modèle de rongeur pour en analyser les effets tardifs. Par analogie avec la clinique, nous avons créé un modèle avec un animal dont le stade développemental pulmonaire est comparable aux prématurés humains et consistant en une oxygénothérapie, une VM modérée avec intubation non chirurgicale, similaire à la pratique quotidienne, et un contexte inflammatoire mimant celui de chorioamnionite dans lequel bien des prématurés naissent. Nous avons ensuite réalisé une extubation pour permettre une période de rétablissement, puis fait des analyses et sur le plan structurel par histologie conventionnelle et en 3D, et sur le plan biologique, par analyse de l'expression de gènes et de protéines. Ce travail a permis de valider ce nouveau modèle comme outil de recherche pour réaliser des mesures à distance d'une VM chez des rats nouveau-nés. Comparant ces mesures à celles prises à la fin de la VM, nous observons: une augmentation initiale et transitoire des médiateurs impliqués dans la cascade inflammatoire dont le corrélat histologique est une maladie inflammatoire pulmonaire et, tardivement, une altération plus développementale de la structure pulmonaire avec diminution de l'alvéolarisation. Ceci pourrait être en partie dû à une expression asynchrone de gènes décrits comme importants pour la formation des alvéoles (matrix metalloproteinase 9, elastine). Offrant une nouvelle approche pour la recherche pulmonaire chez les rongeurs, ce modèle servira comme futur outil pour approfondir nos connaissances de la physiopathologie conduisant aux altérations structurelles retrouvées dans les poumons d'anciens prématurés soumis à une VM (dysplasie broncho-pulmonaire), pour tester l'influence de certains traitements (p.ex. surfactant) et pour étudier les effets de la VM en l'appliquant à des modèles transgéniques.