• Anesthesia and analgesia · Dec 2009

    Need for emergency surgical airway reduced by a comprehensive difficult airway program.

    • Lauren C Berkow, Robert S Greenberg, Kristin H Kan, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Lynette J Mark, Paul W Flint, Marco Corridore, Nasir Bhatti, and Eugenie S Heitmiller.
    • Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 600 N. Wolfe St., Meyer 8-134, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA. lberkow1@jhmi.edu
    • Anesth. Analg. 2009 Dec 1;109(6):1860-9.

    BackgroundInability to intubate and ventilate patients with respiratory failure is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. A patient is considered to have a difficult airway if an anesthesiologist or other health care provider experienced in airway management is unable to ventilate the patient's lungs using bag-mask ventilation and/or is unable to intubate the trachea using direct laryngoscopy.MethodsWe performed a retrospective review of a departmental database to determine whether a comprehensive program to manage difficult airways was associated with a reduced need to secure the airway surgically via cricothyrotomy or tracheostomy. The annual number of unplanned, emergency surgical airway procedures for inability to intubate and ventilate reported for the 4 yr before the program (January 1992 through December 1995) was compared with the annual number reported for the 11 yr after the program was initiated (January 1996 through December 2006).ResultsThe number of emergency surgical airways decreased from 6.5 +/- 0.5 per year for 4 yr before program initiation to 2.2 +/- 0.89 per year for the 11-yr period after program initiation (P < 0.0001). During the 4-yr period from January 1992 through December 1995, 26 surgical airways were reported, whereas only 24 surgical airways were performed in the subsequent 11-yr period (January 1996 through December 2006).ConclusionsA comprehensive difficult airway program was associated with a reduction in the number of emergency surgical airway procedures performed for the inability of an anesthesiologist to intubate and ventilate, a reduction that was sustained over an 11-yr period. This decrease occurred despite an increase in the number of patients reported to have a difficult airway and an overall increase in the total number of patients receiving anesthesia per year.

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