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Supraglottic Airway Devices Nap4
Dr Anil Patel Royal National Throat Nose & Ear Hospital and University College Hospital, London
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I have received an honorarium from the Laryngeal Mask Company & I have helped design the A.P. Advance Videolaryngoscope
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Numerical Analysis SAD 56% of all UK general anaesthetics
90% cLMA or LM’s 10% i-gel or Proseal LMA 34 cases where SAD was primary airway Of these 17 were aspiration Of the Non-aspiration events 2 deaths 5 emergency surgical airways 13 ICU admissions
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Non-Aspiration Events - Deaths
loss of airway in the semi-prone position during prolonged surgery in a patient with a predicted difficult airway poor laryngeal mask positioning, loss of airway and unrecognised oesophageal intubation during response to this event
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Anaesthesia Events - 16 cases
generally young (10/16 < 40years) healthy (14/16 ASA 1-2) ‘urgent’ procedure (7/ ‘urgent’) Obesity (11/ %) compared to 31% outside this group None of the patients who aspirated during use of a SAD weighed >100kg
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Outcome and quality of airway management
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Devices Used
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SAD - Themes Patient selection
Limitation of use to appropriate surgery Understand limits of chosen SAD Inexperience, insertion and fixation Use of second generation devices Problems during maintenance Problems at emergence, recovery or removal
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Patient Selection aspiration risk, predicted difficult airway, urgent surgery, obesity
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Limitation of use to appropriate surgery
obese, lithotomy, head / down, very prolonged, prone
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Inexperience
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Inexperience and Insertion
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Maintenance
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Emergence, Recovery or Removal
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SAD - Themes Patient selection
Limitation of use to appropriate surgery Understand limits of chosen SAD Inexperience, insertion and fixation Use of second generation devices Problems during maintenance Problems at emergence, recovery or removal
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Recommendations Laryngeal mask anaesthesia is a fundamental skill
Same attention to detail as intubation patient selection indications contraindications insertion confirmation correct position maintenance removal and recovery
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Recommendations SAD use for difficult intubation, consider awake FOI or FOI through SAD Difficult or failed SAD placement should raise the possibility of complications during maintenance / emergence / recovery Continuing anaesthesia with a suboptimal airway after SAD insertion is not acceptable Recovery staff competent with SAD procedures and timing of removal
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Recommendation If tracheal intubation is not considered to be indicated but there is some (small) increased concern about regurgitation risk a second generation SAD is a more logical choice than a first generation one. Factors that mean use of SAD is at limits of normality (prone, airway access, size) consider second generation SAD All hospitals have second generation SAD’s available for both routine use and rescue airway management
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Supraglottic Airway Devices Nap4
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