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Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

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Page 1: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Upper Airway management

Dr K S HettiarachchiConsultant anaesthetistSBSCHPeradeniya

Page 2: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

options to manage

the airway

Simple airway adjuncts– Oropharyngeal

airway – Nasopharyngeal

airways

Bag-valve-mask(BVM) – ventilation

Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA)

ET tube

Page 3: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Simple airway

adjuncts

Page 4: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Rusch Color Coded Guedel Airways

Page 5: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 6: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 7: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway obstruction

Page 8: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Sizing an oropharyngeal airway

Page 9: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 10: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Oropharyngeal airway insertion

Page 11: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 12: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Management

Mouth to Mask

BVM (Bag-valve-mask)Ventilation

Page 13: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 14: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 15: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 16: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 17: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 18: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 19: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 20: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 21: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

The most important

airway skill

Page 22: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Mask Ventilation

The most important airway skill

Always the first response to inadequate oxygenation and ventilation

The first “bail-out” maneuver to a failed intubation attempt

Attenuates the urgency to intubate

Page 23: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

BVM Ventilation

Requires practice to master

One hand to– maintain face seal– position head– maintain patency

Other hand ventilates

Page 24: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Bag-valve-mask, 2-person ventilation

Page 25: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Sniffing the morning air!!

Page 26: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Sniffing PositionAlign oral, pharyngeal, and laryngeal axes tobring epiglottis and vocal cords into view

Page 27: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 28: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 29: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

BVM Ventilation:

Assessment of Efficacy

How do I know I am ventilating?

• Observe the chest rise and fall

• Good bilateral air entry

• Lack of air entering the stomach

• Feeling the bag• ETco2• Pulse oximetry

Page 30: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 31: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Laryngeal Mask Airway

Page 32: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 33: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 34: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 35: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 36: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
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Page 39: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

LMA Insertion

Page 40: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Laryngeal Mask Airway

Page 41: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

LMA Size

Patient Size

1 Neonate / Infants < 5 kg

1 ½ Infants 5-10 kg

2 Infants / Children 10-20 kg

2 ½ Children 20-30 kg

3 Children/Small adults 30-50 kg

4 Adults 50-70 kg

5 Large adult >70 kg

LMA Sizing

Page 42: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya
Page 43: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Advantages of Using LMA

1. Leaves provider’s hands free

2. Patient can produce effective cough

3. Allows spontaneous ventilation

4. Malposition even can adequately ventilate

5. Sore Throat- less than ETT

6. Better tolerated than ETT

7. Better than Face Mask

8. Minimal CV Response

Page 44: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Disadvantages of LMA over ETT 1. Lower seal pressure

2. Higher frequency of gastric insufflation

3. Increased Aspiration risk

Page 45: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Endotracheal

intubation

Page 46: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Equipment

LaryngoscopeTubesOxygen sourceBag & MaskSuction

LubricantForceps (Magill)Adhesive tapeStyletSyringe

Page 47: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Stainless Laryngoscope Blades

Page 48: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Tracheal Tube

Page 49: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

ETT : sizes (Pediartics)

Page 50: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Anticipate the difficulties

– Identify in advance the patient with anatomical difficulty

– Have sufficient skill and training

– Have a preformulated plan for potential disaster

Page 51: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

What do we do when we have

a difficult

airway ?

Page 52: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Be prepared

• Do we have all the help we need, all Airway equipment with us? (Suction?)

Competence with all equipment Working equipment Be prepared for surgical management Master the art of bagging Have at least one, if not two, working

IV lines

Page 53: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Equipment

– Suction, Oxygen– Laryngoscope, ET Tubes, Stylet– BVM– Monitoring equipment

• Continuous cardiac monitoring• Pulse oximeter (continuous)• Auto BP (ideal)• CO2 device (ET confirmation device)

– Pharmacologic agents, mixed and ready

Page 54: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Differences

Nose

Tongue

TracheaCricoidAirway

Page 55: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Adapted from Walls et al. anual of Emergency Airway Management. 2nd Ed. 2004.

Page 56: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Shape

Adapted from Walls et al. Manual of Emergency Airway Management. 2nd Ed. 2004.

Page 57: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Effect Of Edema

Poiseuille’s law

Page 58: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Technique of Laryngoscopy

• “Sniffing” position to align oral-pharyngeal-laryngeal axis

• Flex neck by placing pillow beneath occiput (raise 10 cm)

• Extend head maximally• With laryngoscope

– open mouth fully– push tongue to left out of view– pull upward at 45 degrees

Page 59: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Correct Placement for intubation (b)

Page 60: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Insertion of tracheal tube

Page 61: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Management

Page 62: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Management

Page 63: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Airway Management

Page 64: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Confirmation of ETT Placement:Clinical Evaluation

• Observation of ETT pacing through cords• Clear, equal breath sounds bilaterally• Absence of breath sounds over

epigastrium• Symmetrical rising of chest• Condensation or “fogging” of ETT• ET co2

ALL SUBJECT TO FAILURE• Pulse oximetry is LATE indicator

Page 65: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Confirmation of ETT Placement

• Placement of ETT in the esophagus is an accepted complication of intubation

• However, failure to recognize and correct esophageal intubation immediately IS NOT ACCEPTABLE

• ETCO2 detection should be used on every emergency intubation

Page 66: Upper Airway management Dr K S Hettiarachchi Consultant anaesthetist SBSCH Peradeniya

Summery

Options to manage the airway

• Simple airway adjuncts• oropharyngeal airway • Nasopharyngeal airways

• Mouth to mask ventilation• Bag-valve-mask – ventilation (BVM)• Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA)• ET tube