• Anesthesia and analgesia · Jul 2004

    Twenty months' routine use of a new percutaneous tracheostomy set using controlled rotating dilation.

    • Neel Sengupta, Keng Leong Ang, Doraiswamy Prakash, Vivien Ng, and Shane J George.
    • Intensive Care Unit, Harefield Hospital, Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospitals NHS Trust, Middlesex, UK.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2004 Jul 1; 99 (1): 188-92.

    AbstractAfter a favorable trial period, we introduced the new percutaneous tracheostomy set, PercuTwist, in February of 2002 for our routine procedures. Over the next 20 mo, 90 procedures were performed with minimal complications. To prospectively evaluate this experience, we collected information on reasons for unit admission, operators' previous experience, the duration of prior tracheal intubation, the time needed for the procedure, the grading of the difficulty, the amount of bleeding, and the complications of the procedure. Twenty-two of 90 (24.4%) procedures were performed by senior consultants with experience; 68 of 90 (75.6%) were safely performed by intensive care residents under close bedside supervision. The mean time needed for the procedure was 13 min 7 s. In only one procedure during the entire study was any difficulty observed during the insertion process. This occurred because the initial skin incision was too small. However, no major bleeding or complications were encountered.

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