| Literature DB >> 27891426 |
Hemraj Tungaria1, Lalit K Raiger2, Rajkumar Paliwal3, Shekhar Suman Saxena4, Bishan Kumar Bairwa1.
Abstract
Patients with present or previous history of facio-maxillary trauma will mostly be associated with a difficult airway. Surgical correction of these injuries might not always correct the altered airway. We report a case of palatonasal fistula following an old facio-maxillary fracture, which has led to interpretation of a difficult airway into a normal one. The patient was found to be having difficult airway during direct laryngoscopy which caused failure to intubate initially. Though, the patient was successfully intubated in the third attempt by senior anaesthesiologist making use of manoeuvres and equipment available, it made an impact for us to do a proper pre-op evaluation of patients with history of surgical correction of facial injuries and also for being prepared for can't ventilate and can't intubate situation in such type of cases. Through, this case report we stress the importance of airway anatomical alterations following facio-maxillary trauma and their corresponding management.Entities:
Keywords: Difficult airway; Facio-maxillary trauma; Mallampati scoring
Year: 2016 PMID: 27891426 PMCID: PMC5121764 DOI: 10.7860/JCDR/2016/20011.8603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Diagn Res ISSN: 0973-709X