• Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2009

    Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Forces applied to the maxillary incisors during video-assisted intubation.

    • Ruben A Lee, André A J van Zundert, Ralph L J G Maassen, Remi J Willems, Leon P Beeke, Jan N Schaaper, Johan van Dobbelsteen, and Peter A Wieringa.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, and Pain Therapy, Catharina Hospital-Brabant Medical School, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2009 Jan 1;108(1):187-91.

    BackgroundModern, video laryngoscopes provide an easier view of the glottis, possibly facilitating easier intubations. We describe an objective method for evaluating the benefits of video-assisted laryngoscopy, compared with standard techniques using force measurements.MethodMacintosh and video laryngoscopes (both Karl Storz, Tuttlingen, Germany) were used on the patients until the anesthesiologist was convinced he or she had the best possible view of the glottis. Actual intubation was only performed with the second of the laryngoscopes. Sensors measured the forces directly applied to the patients' maxillary incisors. Additionally, common subjective pre- (e.g., Mallampati) and intraintubation (e.g., Cormack-Lehane [C&L]) metrics of intubation difficulty were evaluated by the anesthesiologists.ResultsAll patients (24 female, [50 +/- 16 yr], 20 male [56 +/- 13 yr]) included in the study were successfully intubated with both the classic and video laryngoscopes. The forces recorded for the classic Macintosh blade ranged from 0 to 87.4 N with a median of 15.3 N, whereas the video laryngoscope forces ranged from 0 to 45.2 N, with a median of 2.1 N. The only factor determined to be significantly influential on the associated forces applied to the maxillary incisors was the laryngoscope type (P < 0.01). Video-assisted laryngoscopes reduced the applied forces over standard blades. Mallampati and C&L grade were not predictive of the forces applied.ConclusionsVideo-assisted laryngoscopes seem beneficial when considering forces applied to the maxillary incisors as an objective metric of intubation difficulty. In this study, we could not support that Mallampati and C&L grades predict the forces that are applied to the maxillary incisors.

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