| Literature DB >> 33781212 |
Ron O Abrons1, Patrick Ten Eyck2, Isaac D Sheffield3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oropharyngeal airways are used both to facilitate airway patency during mask ventilation as well as conduits for flexible scope intubation, though none excel at both. A novel device, the Articulated Oral Airway (AOA), is designed to facilitate flexible scope intubation by active displacement of the tongue. Whether this active tongue displacement also facilitates mask ventilation, thus adding dual functionality, is unknown. This study compared the AOA to the Guedel Oral Airway (GOA) in regards to efficacy of mask ventilation of patients with factors predictive of difficult mask ventilation. The hypothesis was that the AOA would be non-inferior to the GOA in terms of expiratory tidal volumes by a margin of 1 ml/kg, thus demonstrating dual functionality.Entities:
Keywords: Mask ventilation; Morbid obesity; Oral airway
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33781212 PMCID: PMC8006343 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-021-01315-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Fig. 1AOA in the closed (a), open (b), and disarticulated (c) conformations
Fig. 2CONSORT flow chart
Demographics, pre-operative airway examination measures, and intubation variables
| Variable | Guedel placed first ( | AOA placed first (n = 29) |
|---|---|---|
| Age; years | 60 (53–65) | 64 (58–68) |
| Presence of facial hair | 11 (37.9%) | 13 (44.8%) |
| History of Snoring | 26 (89.7%) | 28 (96.6%) |
| Neck extension | ||
| Full | 29 (100%) | 26 (89.7%) |
| Limited | 0 (0%) | 3 (10.3%) |
| Presence of retrognathia | 4 (13.8%) | 7 (24.1%) |
| Nasal/Oral anatomical abnormality | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| 1 | ||
| 2 | ||
| 3 | ||
| 4 | ||
| Easy one-handed mask ventilation | 21 (72.4%) | 22 (78.6%) |
Comparison of weight-standardized expiratory tidal volumes controlling for device randomization order
| Variable | Guedel vs. AOA | |
|---|---|---|
| Expiratory tidal volume | Mean diff = 0.452 (ml/kg) CI = (0.335 to 0.568) | |
| Inspiratory tidal volume | Mean diff = −0.109 (ml/kg) CI = (− 0.261 to 0.044) | |
| Ease of placement | aOdds ratio = 0.136 CI = (0.007 to 2.684) | 0.24 |
| Normal expiratory waveform | Odds ratio = 1.772 CI = (0.650 to 4.832) | 0.26 |
| Blood on 1st device (Guedel 1st vs. 2nd) | Odds ratio = 7.793 CI = (0.384 to 157.972) | 0.24 |
a = corrected odds ratio for 0-cell count
Comparison of weight-standardized expiratory tidal volumes in patients not initially easy to mask ventilate
| Variable | Guedel vs. AOA | |
|---|---|---|
| Expiratory tidal volume | Mean diff = 0.397 (ml/kg) CI = (0.134 to 0.660) | |
| Inspiratory tidal volume | Mean diff = − 0.041 (ml/kg) CI = (− 0.321 to 0.240) | |
| Ease of placement | aOdds ratio = 0.312 CI = (0.012 to 8.285) | > 0.999 |
| Normal expiratory waveform | Odds ratio = 1.536 CI = (0.238 to 9.926) | 0.65 |
| Blood on 1st device (Guedel 1st vs. 2nd) | aOdds ratio = 5.769 CI = (0.232 to 143.371) | 0.47 |
a = corrected odds ratio for 0-cell count