| Literature DB >> 31533787 |
Wojciech Walas1, Dawid Aleksandrowicz2, Maria Kornacka3, Tomasz Gaszyński4, Ewa Helwich5, Marek Migdał6, Andrzej Piotrowski7, Grażyna Siejka8, Tomasz Szczapa9, Alicja Bartkowska-Śniatkowska10, Zenon P Halaba11.
Abstract
Children form a specific group of patients, as there are significant differences between children and adults in both anatomy and physiology. Difficult airway may be unanticipated or anticipated. Difficulties encountered during intubation may cause hypoxia, hypoxic brain injury and, in extreme situations, may result in the patient's death. There are few paediatric difficult-airway guidelines available in the current literature, and some of these have significant limitations. This position paper, intended for unanticipated difficult airway, was elaborated by the panel of specialists representing the Polish Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care as well as the Polish Neonatal Society. It covers both elective intubation and emergency situations in children in all age groups. An integral part of the paper is an algorithm. The paper describes in detail all stages of the algorithm considering some modification in specific age groups, i.e. neonates.Entities:
Keywords: Child and adolescent; Difficult intubation; Infant; Neonate
Year: 2019 PMID: 31533787 PMCID: PMC6751579 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-019-0666-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1Algorithm: The management of unanticipated difficult airway in children
Recommended tracheal tube size and depth of tracheal tube insertion for oral and nasal intubation in relation to the body weight of a neonate and an infant
| Body weight (g) | Internal diameter (mm) | Depth of tracheal tube insertion (oral intubation) (cm) | Depth of tracheal tube insertion (nasal intubation) (cm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 750 | 2.5 | 5.5–6 | 6.5–7 |
| 750–1000 | 3 | 6–7 | 7–8 |
| 1001–2000 | 3 | 7–8 | 9 |
| 2001–3000 | 3.5 | 8–9 | 10 |
| 3000–3500 | 3.5 | 9–10 | 11 |
| > 3500 | 4.0 | b.w. (kg) + 6 | b.w. (kg) + 7 |
bw body weight
Recommended LMA sizing
| Patient size | LMA size |
|---|---|
| Neonate, infant < 5 kg | 1 |
| Infant 5–10 kg | 1.5 |
| Infant, child 10–20 kg | 2 |
| Child 20–30 kg | 2.5 |
| Child 30–50 kg | 3 |
| Child /Adult 50–70 kg | 4.0 |
| Child / Adult 70–100 kg | 5 |
Difficult airway kita
| Stage II A: Maximising the chances of successful intubation. | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Specialist/alternative laryngoscopes e.g. McCoy, optical laryngoscope, and/or video laryngoscope and/or optical stylet. |
| 2 | Full set of malleable airway stylets and introducers e.g. gum elastic bougie |
| 3 | Full set of oropharyngeal airways (in various sizes), additionally recommended full set of nasopharyngeal airways (in various sizes). |
| 4 | Tables containing recommended sizes of tracheal tubes and recommended depth of their insertion (age-related). |
| 5 | Drugs: rocuronium, suxamethonium, atropine, sugammadex. |
Stage III A: Use of SAD Stage III B: Intubation through SAD | |
| 6 | Full set of supraglottic airways devices of in various sizes, preferred double-lumen laryngeal mask airways (LMA, ILMA) with a gastric channel. |
| 7 | Table containing recommended sizes of LMA. |
| Stage IV: Front-of-neck access. | |
| 8 | Original cricothyroidotomy kitb e.g. Quicktrach, Mini-Trach in various sizes, and/or 6G intravenous cannula for alternative needle cricothyroidotomy. |
| 9 | Original retrograde intubation set e.g. Cook® Retrograde Intubation Set in various sizes and/or Tuohy needle and cannulation set (Seldinger technique) for alternative retrograde intubation. |
| 10 | Full set of tracheostomy tubes in various sizes. |
| 11 | Additional equipment: scalpel, sterile gauze/swab, skin disinfectant, sterile gloves in various sizes. |
| Additionally recommended. | |
| 12 | Manujet III device. |
| 13 | Fibre-optic scope with complete kit of different sizes (essential for the management of anticipated difficult airway). |
aNot all types/models of devices are essential for this kit. A single device from each group is sufficient
b“Original kit” here refers to a set of equipment manufactured by medical companies (OEMs), readily available on the market