Articles: intubation.
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Review Case Reports
The difficult airway in obstetric anesthesia: techniques for airway management and the role of regional anesthesia.
A case is presented illustrating the use of a continuous spinal anesthetic in a parturient with a difficult airway who required urgent cesarean delivery. Options for endotracheal intubation of a parturient with a difficult airway are reviewed. ⋯ Available data suggest that regional anesthesia, specifically continuous spinal anesthesia, may be a safe and effective option for management of a parturient with a difficult airway. Further investigation of this technique is merited.
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The rapid and safe establishment and maintenance of an adequate airway in patients with acute, severe head injuries is of central importance in the "ABC" approach to the trauma victim. It is also necessary before hyperventilation can be instituted as a means of controlling intracranial pressure. A method of establishing an airway in a manner that best protects the patient from unnecessary elevations in intracranial pressure with the least possible risk is presented. This method can be applied in virtually all emergency departments, from community hospitals to teaching centers, using materials and expertise currently available.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 1988
Managing the difficult airway in patients with burns of the head and neck.
A five-phase defined protocol for airway security was developed and administered to a consecutive, selected series of surgical patients with burns to the head and neck that limited their mouth opening or neck mobility. The protocol uses fiberoptic light and scope systems to allow the anesthesia team to visually place the endotracheal tube properly before anesthesia is induced. The technique provides safe, efficient airway management for patients with burns to the head and neck and significantly diminishes patient risks.
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Airway obstruction during the induction of general anesthesia remains a persistent problem in modern anesthesia practice, particularly in obstetric patients. Generally, a careful preoperative airway evaluation uncovers most abnormalities that might make intubation difficult. ⋯ Although every anesthesia provider is trained to manage such acute airway problems, the provision of a patent airway is not always possible, particularly when repeated attempts at endoscopic or blind intubation have failed, leaving a bloody field that prevents optimal visualization, or when time does not allow to wake up the patient. In this article a difficult airway problem is reported in which translaryngeal guided intubation was lifesaving.