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Difficult or impossible facemask ventilation in children with difficult tracheal intubation: a retrospective analysis of the PeDI registry

Authors :
Annery G. Garcia-Marcinkiewicz
Lisa K. Lee
Bishr Haydar
John E. Fiadjoe
Clyde T. Matava
Pete G. Kovatsis
James Peyton
Mary L. Stein
Raymond Park
Brad M. Taicher
Thomas W. Templeton
Benjamin B. Bruins
Paul Stricker
Elizabeth K. Laverriere
Justin L. Lockman
Brian Struyk
Christopher Ward
Akira Nishisaki
Ramesh Kodavatiganti
Rodrigo J. Daly Guris
Luis Sequera-Ramos
Mark S. Teen
Ayodele Oke
Grace Hsu
Arul Lingappan
Chinyere Egbuta
Stephen Flynn
Lina Sarmiento
Tally Goldfarb
Edgar E. Kiss
Patrick N. Olomu
Peter Szmuk
Sam Mireles
Andrea Murray
Simon Whyte
Ranu Jain
Maria Matuszczak
Agnes Hunyady
Adrian Bosenberg
See Tham
Daniel Low
Christopher Holmes
Stefan Sabato
Nicholas Dalesio
Robert Greenberg
Angela Lucero
Paul Reynolds
Ian Lewis
Charles Schrock
Sydney Nykiel-Bailey
Elizabeth Starker
Judit Szolnoki
Melissa Brooks-Peterson
Somaletha Bhattacharya
Nicholas E. Burjek
Narasimhan Jagannathan
David Lardner
Scott Watkins
Christy Crockett
John Moore
Sara Robertson
Madhankumar Sathyamoorthy
Franklin Chiao
Jasmine Patel
Aarti Sharma
Piedad Echeverry Marin
Carolina Pérez-Pradilla
Neeta Singh
Britta S. von Ungern-Sternberg
David Sommerfield
Guelay Bilen-Rosas
Hilana Lewkowitz-Shpuntoff
Pilar Castro
N. Ricardo Riveros Perez
Jurgen C. de Graaff
Eduardo Vega
Alejandro González
Paola Ostermann
Kasia Rubin
Charles (Ted) Lord
Angela Lee
Eugenie Heitmiller
Songyos Valairucha
Priti Dalal
Thanh Tran
Ihab Ayad
Mohamed Rehman
Allison Fernandez
Lillian Zamora
Niroop Ravula
Sadiq Shaik
Anesthesiology
Source :
British Journal of Anaesthesia. Elsevier Ltd.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Background: Difficult facemask ventilation is perilous in children whose tracheas are difficult to intubate. We hypothesised that certain physical characteristics and anaesthetic factors are associated with difficult mask ventilation in paediatric patients who also had difficult tracheal intubation. Methods: We queried a multicentre registry for children who experienced “difficult” or “impossible” facemask ventilation. Patient and case factors known before mask ventilation attempt were included for consideration in this regularised multivariable regression analysis. Incidence of complications, and frequency and efficacy of rescue placement of a supraglottic airway device were also tabulated. Changes in quality of mask ventilation after injection of a neuromuscular blocking agent were assessed. Results: The incidence of difficult mask ventilation was 9% (483 of 5453 patients). Infants and patients having increased weight, being less than 5th percentile in weight for age, or having Treacher-Collins syndrome, glossoptosis, or limited mouth opening were more likely to have difficult mask ventilation. Anaesthetic induction using facemask and opioids was associated with decreased risk of difficult mask ventilation. The incidence of complications was significantly higher in patients with “difficult” mask ventilation than in patients without. Rescue placement of a supraglottic airway improved ventilation in 71% (96 of 135) of cases. Administration of neuromuscular blocking agents was more frequently associated with improvement or no change in quality of ventilation than with worsening. Conclusions: Certain abnormalities on physical examination should increase suspicion of possible difficult facemask ventilation. Rescue use of a supraglottic airway device in children with difficult or impossible mask ventilation should be strongly considered.

Subjects

Subjects :
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Details

ISSN :
00070912
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Anaesthesia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89d2617f1d6a9bb11c64454761035631
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2023.02.035