Articles: tracheal-tube.
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Tracheal tube tip and cuff positions of different cuffed paediatric tracheal tube brands in the trachea can vary with design. ⋯ All studied cuffed paediatric tracheal tubes have major design flaws potentially leading to airway complications. Tracheal tube manufacturers are urgently asked to improve the design of cuffed paediatric tracheal tubes. Alternative strategies for tracheal tube placement can allow safe tracheal tube placement of uncuffed but not of cuffed tracheal tubes.
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Observational Study
Evaluation of pH on removed tracheal tubes after general anesthesia: a prospective observational study.
Aspiration pneumonia is a complication of tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation. We hypothesized that tracheal tubes removed after anesthesia that have an acidic pH may reflect latent regurgitation of gastric fluid. ⋯ Acidic pH was found on about 2.5% of removed tracheal tubes. These tubes were used in patients who were in the prone or head-down position during general anesthesia, although they did not exhibit significant aspiration symptom. Anesthesiologists should be aware of the inherent risk of gastric fluid regurgitation when their patients undergo general anesthesia in these positions.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Effect of neck extension on the advancement of tracheal tubes from the nasal cavity to the oropharynx in nasotracheal intubation: a randomized controlled trial.
Clinicians sometimes encounter resistance in advancing a tracheal tube, which is inserted via a nostril, from the nasal cavity into the oropharynx during nasotracheal intubation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of neck extension on the advancement of tracheal tubes from the nasal cavity into the oropharynx during nasotracheal intubation. ⋯ Neck extension during tube advancement from the nasal cavity to the oropharynx before laryngoscopy could be helpful in nasotracheal intubation.
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Observational Study
Using middle finger length to determine the internal diameter of uncuffed tracheal tubes in paediatrics.
The selection of an appropriately-sized tracheal tube is of critical importance in paediatric patients to reduce both the risk of subglottic stenosis from a tracheal tube that is too large, and inadequate ventilation or poor end-tidal gas monitoring from a tracheal tube that is too small. Age formulae are widely used, but known to be unreliable, often resulting in a need to change the tracheal tube. Previous work has shown that the length of the middle finger and the internal diameter can both be used to guide depth of tracheal tube insertion. ⋯ We found a linear relationship between uncuffed tracheal tube internal diameter and median middle finger length for each size of tracheal tube. Relationship between middle finger length and cuffed tracheal tube internal diameter was less clear. We propose that the formula: 'middle finger length (cm) (round up to nearest 0.5) = internal diameter of uncuffed tracheal tube (mm)' may be an improvement compared with age formulae for selecting uncuffed tracheal tubes in children, although this requires formal testing.