• Anaesthesia · Apr 1988

    Tracheal tube cuff pressure. Clinical use of the Cardiff Cuff Controller.

    • B A Willis, I P Latto, and A Dyson.
    • Department of Anaesthetics, University Hospital of Wales, Health Park, Cardiff.
    • Anaesthesia. 1988 Apr 1;43(4):312-4.

    AbstractSeventy-one adult patients (31 male, 40 female) who presented for surgery underwent orotracheal intubation with Portex Blue Line standard cuff disposable tubes (9-mm for males, 8-mm for females). The tracheal tube cuff was inflated by a trained assistant using a syringe and the initial cuff pressure measured; the minimum cuff pressure required to prevent respiratory gas leakage was also measured and the cuff pressure maintained above this pressure throughout the operation by means of the Cardiff Cuff Controller. Initial cuff pressure values averaged 11.9 kPa for males and 13.5 kPa for females compared with minimum cuff pressure values of 5.2 and 1.2 kPa, respectively. The differences between initial and minimum pressures were statistically highly significant (p much less than 0.001). It is concluded that the present method of inflation may lead to gross overinflation of tracheal tube cuffs and that cuff pressure monitoring may be performed simply by means of an electropneumatic controller. The difference in minimum cuff pressure between males and females suggests that the difference in tracheal size between the sexes is greater than the 9-mm to 8-mm difference in tracheal tube size.

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