• Medicine · Oct 2022

    Case Reports

    The difficult removal of tracheal tube after general anesthesia: A case report.

    • Man Li, YaLan Yan, PeiYu Li, and Lan Zhang.
    • Department of Anesthesia, Sichuan Provincial Orthopedic Hospital (Chengdu Sports Hospital and Chengdu Research Institute for Sports Injury), Chengdu, China.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2022 Oct 7; 101 (40): e30968e30968.

    BackgroundLaryngeal injury is common after endotracheal intubation, presenting with varying degrees of edema, ulceration, granulation, and limited vocal cord movement, usually resulting in lumen narrowing. In these cases, laryngeal edema is a common complication after intubation, usually caused by direct pressure and inflammatory reaction caused by endotracheal intubation on the contact surface.Case PresentationA 71-year-old female was scheduled to undergo open reduction and internal fixation of femoral neck. On admission, she was diagnosed with femoral neck fracture. Tracheal intubation induced by general anesthesia was successful, but the tracheal catheter was difficult to remove after the operation. After 2 days of detumescence in ICU, the extubation was successful under the condition of complete recovery of spontaneous breathing.ConclusionsPatients undergoing general anesthesia may have laryngeal or glottic edema due to operation time, operation and other reasons, resulting in difficulty in extubation after general anesthesia. The extubation action shall be gentle. In case of obvious resistance, it shall not be forcibly extubated to prevent serious dyspnea after extubation.Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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