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

Anaesth Crit Care Pain Med

Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Clinical University Hospital of Santiago, Sanitary Research Institute of Santiago (IDIS), Spain; Preventive Medicine and Public Health Unit, Department of Health Sciences, University of A Coruña-INIBIC, A Coruña, Spain.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the use of a hyperangulated videolaryngoscope to direct laryngoscopy for tracheal intubation in ICU patients, focusing on the ease of the procedure.
  • During the interventional period, the hyperangulated videolaryngoscope led to a higher rate of "easy intubation" (92.5%) compared to direct laryngoscopy (75.8%).
  • The use of the videolaryngoscope also decreased difficult laryngoscopy incidents and technical difficulties without increasing complication rates.

Article Abstract

Background: 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.

Methods: 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.

Results: 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 < 0.001)). Glottic visualization improved in the interventional period, with a reduced incidence of difficult laryngoscopy (1.5% vs. 22.5%; P < 0.001). The proportion of first-success rate intubation was 92.5% in the interventional period, and 87.8% in the non-interventional period (P = 0.147). Moderate and severe technical difficulty of intubation reported decreased in the interventional period (6% vs. 17.6%; P < 0.001). There was no significant difference between both periods in the incidence of complications.

Conclusion: "Universal" use of hyperangulated videolaryngoscopy for tracheal intubation in patients admitted in ICU improves the percentage of easy intubation compared to direct laryngoscopy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.accpm.2024.101402DOI Listing

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