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All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation

Extubation has an important role in optimal patient recovery in the perioperative period. The All India Difficult Airway Association (AIDAA) reiterates that extubation is as important as intubation and requires proper planning. AIDAA has formulated an algorithm based on the current evidence, member...

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Autores principales: Kundra, Pankaj, Garg, Rakesh, Patwa, Apeksh, Ahmed, Syed Moied, Ramkumar, Venkateswaran, Shah, Amit, Divatia, Jigeeshu Vasishtha, Shetty, Sumalatha Radhakrishna, Raveendra, Ubaradka S, Doctor, Jeson R, Pawar, Dilip K, Singaravelu, Ramesh, Das, Sabyasachi, Myatra, Sheila Nainan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5168894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28003693
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0019-5049.195484
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author Kundra, Pankaj
Garg, Rakesh
Patwa, Apeksh
Ahmed, Syed Moied
Ramkumar, Venkateswaran
Shah, Amit
Divatia, Jigeeshu Vasishtha
Shetty, Sumalatha Radhakrishna
Raveendra, Ubaradka S
Doctor, Jeson R
Pawar, Dilip K
Singaravelu, Ramesh
Das, Sabyasachi
Myatra, Sheila Nainan
author_facet Kundra, Pankaj
Garg, Rakesh
Patwa, Apeksh
Ahmed, Syed Moied
Ramkumar, Venkateswaran
Shah, Amit
Divatia, Jigeeshu Vasishtha
Shetty, Sumalatha Radhakrishna
Raveendra, Ubaradka S
Doctor, Jeson R
Pawar, Dilip K
Singaravelu, Ramesh
Das, Sabyasachi
Myatra, Sheila Nainan
author_sort Kundra, Pankaj
collection PubMed
description Extubation has an important role in optimal patient recovery in the perioperative period. The All India Difficult Airway Association (AIDAA) reiterates that extubation is as important as intubation and requires proper planning. AIDAA has formulated an algorithm based on the current evidence, member survey and expert opinion to incorporate all patients of difficult extubation for a successful extubation. The algorithm is not designed for a routine extubation in a normal airway without any associated comorbidity. Extubation remains an elective procedure, and hence, patient assessment including concerns related to airway needs to be done and an extubation strategy must be planned before extubation. Extubation planning would broadly be dependent on preventing reflex responses (haemodynamic and cardiovascular), presence of difficult airway at initial airway management, delayed recovery after the surgical intervention or airway difficulty due to pre-existing diseases. At times, maintaining a patent airway may become difficult either due to direct handling during initial airway management or due to surgical intervention. This also mandates a careful planning before extubation to avoid extubation failure. Certain long-standing diseases such as goitre or presence of obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea may have increased chances of airway collapse. These patients require planned extubation strategies for extubation. This would avoid airway collapse leading to airway obstruction and its sequelae. AIDAA suggests that the extubation plan would be based on assessment of the airway. Patients requiring suppression of haemodynamic responses would require awake extubation with pharmacological attenuation or extubation under deep anaesthesia using supraglottic devices as bridge. Patients with difficult airway (before surgery or after surgical intervention) or delayed recovery or difficulty due to pre-existing diseases would require step-wise approach. Oxygen supplementation should continue throughout the extubation procedure. A systematic approach as briefed in the algorithm needs to be complemented with good clinical judgement for an uneventful extubation.
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spelling pubmed-51688942016-12-21 All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation Kundra, Pankaj Garg, Rakesh Patwa, Apeksh Ahmed, Syed Moied Ramkumar, Venkateswaran Shah, Amit Divatia, Jigeeshu Vasishtha Shetty, Sumalatha Radhakrishna Raveendra, Ubaradka S Doctor, Jeson R Pawar, Dilip K Singaravelu, Ramesh Das, Sabyasachi Myatra, Sheila Nainan Indian J Anaesth Guidelines 4 (AIDAA) Extubation has an important role in optimal patient recovery in the perioperative period. The All India Difficult Airway Association (AIDAA) reiterates that extubation is as important as intubation and requires proper planning. AIDAA has formulated an algorithm based on the current evidence, member survey and expert opinion to incorporate all patients of difficult extubation for a successful extubation. The algorithm is not designed for a routine extubation in a normal airway without any associated comorbidity. Extubation remains an elective procedure, and hence, patient assessment including concerns related to airway needs to be done and an extubation strategy must be planned before extubation. Extubation planning would broadly be dependent on preventing reflex responses (haemodynamic and cardiovascular), presence of difficult airway at initial airway management, delayed recovery after the surgical intervention or airway difficulty due to pre-existing diseases. At times, maintaining a patent airway may become difficult either due to direct handling during initial airway management or due to surgical intervention. This also mandates a careful planning before extubation to avoid extubation failure. Certain long-standing diseases such as goitre or presence of obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea may have increased chances of airway collapse. These patients require planned extubation strategies for extubation. This would avoid airway collapse leading to airway obstruction and its sequelae. AIDAA suggests that the extubation plan would be based on assessment of the airway. Patients requiring suppression of haemodynamic responses would require awake extubation with pharmacological attenuation or extubation under deep anaesthesia using supraglottic devices as bridge. Patients with difficult airway (before surgery or after surgical intervention) or delayed recovery or difficulty due to pre-existing diseases would require step-wise approach. Oxygen supplementation should continue throughout the extubation procedure. A systematic approach as briefed in the algorithm needs to be complemented with good clinical judgement for an uneventful extubation. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2016-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5168894/ /pubmed/28003693 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0019-5049.195484 Text en Copyright: © Indian Journal of Anaesthesia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
spellingShingle Guidelines 4 (AIDAA)
Kundra, Pankaj
Garg, Rakesh
Patwa, Apeksh
Ahmed, Syed Moied
Ramkumar, Venkateswaran
Shah, Amit
Divatia, Jigeeshu Vasishtha
Shetty, Sumalatha Radhakrishna
Raveendra, Ubaradka S
Doctor, Jeson R
Pawar, Dilip K
Singaravelu, Ramesh
Das, Sabyasachi
Myatra, Sheila Nainan
All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title_full All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title_fullStr All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title_full_unstemmed All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title_short All India Difficult Airway Association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
title_sort all india difficult airway association 2016 guidelines for the management of anticipated difficult extubation
topic Guidelines 4 (AIDAA)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5168894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28003693
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0019-5049.195484
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