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Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice

BACKGROUND: Even for the most experienced anesthesiologists “can’t ventilate can’t intubate” scenario in difficult airway management is challenging, and although rare it is life-threatening. AIM: The aim of this survey was to analyse the current practice of difficult airway management at our Univers...

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Autores principales: Kuzmanovska, Biljana, Shosholcheva, Mirjana, Kartalov, Andrijan, Jovanovski-Srceva, Marija, Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Aleksandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Republic of Macedonia 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6901844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31844435
http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2019.673
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author Kuzmanovska, Biljana
Shosholcheva, Mirjana
Kartalov, Andrijan
Jovanovski-Srceva, Marija
Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Aleksandra
author_facet Kuzmanovska, Biljana
Shosholcheva, Mirjana
Kartalov, Andrijan
Jovanovski-Srceva, Marija
Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Aleksandra
author_sort Kuzmanovska, Biljana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Even for the most experienced anesthesiologists “can’t ventilate can’t intubate” scenario in difficult airway management is challenging, and although rare it is life-threatening. AIM: The aim of this survey was to analyse the current practice of difficult airway management at our University teaching hospital. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A ten-question-survey was conducted in the Tertiary University Teaching Hospital “Mother Theresa”, Clinic for Anesthesia, Reanimation and Intensive Care. The survey included demographic data, experience in training anaesthesia, practice in management of anticipated and non-anticipated difficult airway scenario, preferable equipment and knowledge of guidelines and protocols. Responses were noted, evaluated and analysed with the SPSS statistical program. RESULTS: The overall response rate was very good; 94.5% answered the survey. During the assessment of the level of comfort with diverse airway equipment, there was diversity of answers due the experience of anaesthesia training, although the most frequent technique among all responders for anticipated difficult intubation was video laryngoscopy (48%). As for non-anticipated difficult intubation when conventional techniques failed to secure the airway most of the responders answered that they used supra-gothic airway device – laryngeal mask (38%) as a rescue measure. CONCLUSION: Airway assessment, adequate training, experience, and availability of essential equipment are the pillars of successful airway management.
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spelling pubmed-69018442019-12-16 Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice Kuzmanovska, Biljana Shosholcheva, Mirjana Kartalov, Andrijan Jovanovski-Srceva, Marija Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Aleksandra Open Access Maced J Med Sci Clinical Science BACKGROUND: Even for the most experienced anesthesiologists “can’t ventilate can’t intubate” scenario in difficult airway management is challenging, and although rare it is life-threatening. AIM: The aim of this survey was to analyse the current practice of difficult airway management at our University teaching hospital. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A ten-question-survey was conducted in the Tertiary University Teaching Hospital “Mother Theresa”, Clinic for Anesthesia, Reanimation and Intensive Care. The survey included demographic data, experience in training anaesthesia, practice in management of anticipated and non-anticipated difficult airway scenario, preferable equipment and knowledge of guidelines and protocols. Responses were noted, evaluated and analysed with the SPSS statistical program. RESULTS: The overall response rate was very good; 94.5% answered the survey. During the assessment of the level of comfort with diverse airway equipment, there was diversity of answers due the experience of anaesthesia training, although the most frequent technique among all responders for anticipated difficult intubation was video laryngoscopy (48%). As for non-anticipated difficult intubation when conventional techniques failed to secure the airway most of the responders answered that they used supra-gothic airway device – laryngeal mask (38%) as a rescue measure. CONCLUSION: Airway assessment, adequate training, experience, and availability of essential equipment are the pillars of successful airway management. Republic of Macedonia 2019-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6901844/ /pubmed/31844435 http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2019.673 Text en Copyright: © 2019 Biljana Kuzmanovska, Mirjana Shosholcheva, Andrijan Kartalov, Marija Jovanovski-Srceva, Aleksandra Gavrilovska-Brzanov. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/CC BY-NC/4.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Clinical Science
Kuzmanovska, Biljana
Shosholcheva, Mirjana
Kartalov, Andrijan
Jovanovski-Srceva, Marija
Gavrilovska-Brzanov, Aleksandra
Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title_full Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title_fullStr Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title_full_unstemmed Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title_short Survey of Current Difficult Airway Management Practice
title_sort survey of current difficult airway management practice
topic Clinical Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6901844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31844435
http://dx.doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2019.673
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