We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected]
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
This chapter is written for practitioners working within the perioperative environment that require an understanding of how to assess and manage a patient’s airway. An introduction to airway anatomy highlights relevant anatomical landmarks, and a number of techniques that can be employed for both basic and advanced airway management are described. Airway equipment used by the anaesthetic practitioner will vary depending on requirements of the patient and procedure. Therefore, an overview of both standard and specialist airway equipment available, and how this is used to establish and maintain a patent airway, is provided.
This chapter explores the well-established skill of upper airway endoscopy as a tool for assessing the upper airway and planning the best airway management approach for anaesthesia. It also describes the emerging modality of virtual airway endoscopy, which can examine both upper and lower airway, and its potential roles. Both techniques focus on examination of the air column within the airway (Greenland’s ‘middle column’) but can reach beyond the sight of the naked eye. Both techniques have potential to aid understanding of the patient’s airway anatomy and pathology and can enable improved airway planning.
Failure to properly assess and identify possible difficulties with airway management and incorporate these findings to airway management strategies can lead to a poor clinical outcome. A thorough patient history review and physical examination, including bedside airway assessment, often reveal either congenital or acquired clinical conditions that may affect airway management. Ultrasound, radiographic studies and bedside flexible endoscopy for airway assessment are often necessary to understand the mechanism of pathophysiology of the lower airway. The advancement of technology, such as three-dimensional imaging, cone-beam computer tomography and virtual endoscopy, etc., is resulting in the emergence of potential future airway assessment tools. However, the ideal assessment tool for difficult airway management does not exist and unanticipated difficulties often occur. Using multiple tests to predict difficulty in airway management is better than any single test used in isolation. In addition, adverse human factors can significantly impact airway management. The importance of incorporating cognitive aids in our routine practice cannot be underestimated. Airway assessment forms the first part of any airway management strategy, including the use of certain medications and airway techniques. As practitioners, we must rise to the occasion and perform best clinical practice; there can no longer be a disconnect in what we know and what we do. We need to be the strong link in the chain in providing safe and quality care for our patients.
Airway difficulties after complex spine surgeries in prolonged prone position can cause catastrophic complications including severe hypoxia and death. This chapter presents a case study of a patient was a 22-year-old male with severe scoliosis scheduled for a T3-ilium fusion with vertebral column resections. This case discusses the importance of an appropriate extubation strategy in light of the known postoperative complications of prolonged prone positioning. Analgesia was administered using intravenous morphine, titrated to effect. Prone positioning during anesthesia is required to provide operative access for a wide variety of surgical procedures. The leak test and visual inspection of airway swelling are the most common risk assessment tests for extubation. Given the numerous complications unique to patients undergoing complex spine surgeries in the prone position, a systematic approach to extubation should begin as early as possible to optimize safe perioperative care.
Iatrogenic airway injury is mostly caused by laryngoscopy, visualisation of the laryngeal inlet, the placement of a tracheal tube and long-term intubation. Damage to teeth during laryngoscopy is the commonest cause of civil action against anaesthetists. Iatrogenic laryngeal trauma occurs mostly in patients undergoing routine, non-difficult, short-term tracheal intubation. Tracheal intubation-related neuropraxia of the lingual, hypoglossal, and laryngeal nerves have been described. Airway stenosis occurs at any level within the airway following tracheal intubation. Pharyngeal or oesophageal perforation is a serious complication of aerodigestive tract instrumentation, and is associated with a greater severity of injury and risk of mortality than other iatrogenic airway injuries. Trauma to the airway can be broadly classified into two types: external laryngeal trauma which includes blunt and penetrating injuries, and internal airway trauma which includes thermal, caustic and iatrogenic injuries. Non-iatrogenic airway trauma is rare but often life-threatening.
This chapter discusses the airway assessment specific to maxillofacial work and airway management in dento-alveolar surgery, upper airway tumours (intraoral), orthognathic surgery, maxillofacial trauma and infections. Minor surgery involving the teeth and teeth bearing portions of the jaws is known collectively as dento-alveolar surgery and is the most common form of maxillofacial surgery. One of the most challenging groups of patients with maxillofacial surgery is those returning to theatre after head and neck reconstruction. Orthognathic surgery is carried out to correct growth deformity or secondary to trauma. Intra-operative inter-maxillary fixation (IMF) means that nasal intubation is mandatory. Surgical damage to the tracheal tube can occasionally occur intra-operatively. The majority of maxillofacial trauma occurs in young males. Inter-personal violence accounts for a progressively larger proportion of maxillofacial trauma. Laryngotracheal injury occurs in around 1:5000 of maxillofacial trauma cases, but can be life-threatening.
Recommend this
Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this to your organisation's collection.