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Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim · Oct 2013
Awake Fibreoptic Intubation for Forearm Injury in a Patient with Occipito-Cervical Fixator.
- Akcan Akkaya, İsa Yıldız, Abdullah Demirhan, Ümit Yaşar Tekelioğlu, and Hasan Koçoğlu.
- Department of Anaesthesiology and Reanimation, Facult of Medicine, Abant İzzet Baysal University, Bolu, Turkey.
- Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim. 2013 Oct 1; 41 (5): 182-4.
AbstractA 23-year-old male patient with occipitocervical fixator was scheduled for surgery due to injury to the right forearm. The patient's thyromental distance was 5 cm, mouth opening grade II, sternomental distance 10 cm and Mallampati score 4. Loss of extension and rotation movements of the head was assessed as difficult intubation criteria. Anaesthetic procedures are almost always difficult in patients with occipitocervical fixation; the limited cervical extension complicated both intubation and ventilation. In this report, application of general anaesthesia using awake fibreoptic bronchoscopic intubation (FOB) is described. After routine monitoring of vital signs and premedication, hypopharyngeal topical anaesthesia was accomplished by instilling 10% lidocaine spray twice via the appropriate nostril. Superior laryngeal nerve block was performed with local anaesthetic infiltration of tissues 1 cm below the greater horns of the hyoid bone. Lingual and pharyngeal branches of the glossopharyngeal nerve were blocked. Transtracheal block was performed. Following completion of local anaesthesia, the patient was intubated using the awake FOB technique, on 5 L min(-1) of 100% O2. After muscle relaxation, the patient underwent a microsurgical operation to repair eight tendons, one artery, and one nerve. Surgery lasted for 5 hours. When the extubation criteria were met, the patient was extubated. In cases of occipitocervical fixation, which causes severe limitation of neck movements, the use of awake fibreoptic intubation should be considered.
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