The Articulated Oral Airway as an Aid to Mask Ventilation
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 99 |
Updated: | 12/27/2018 |
Start Date: | July 11, 2017 |
End Date: | February 1, 2019 |
Contact: | Ron O Abrons, MD |
Email: | ron-abrons@uiowa.edu |
Phone: | (319)353-8402 |
The Articulated Oral Airway as an Aid to Mask Ventilation, a Prospective Interventional, Non-Inferiority Study
The Articulating Oral Airway (AOA) is a novel oral airway which actively displaces the
tongue, allowing for a greater cross-sectional area for mask ventilation. The investigators
hypothesize that, in patients with predictors for difficult mask ventilation, the AOA will be
non-inferior to the Geudel oral airway in terms of expired tidal volumes.
tongue, allowing for a greater cross-sectional area for mask ventilation. The investigators
hypothesize that, in patients with predictors for difficult mask ventilation, the AOA will be
non-inferior to the Geudel oral airway in terms of expired tidal volumes.
Difficult mask ventilation (MV) is common in the obese population and can result in patient
morbidity and mortality. The Articulating Oral Airway (AOA) is a novel oral airway which
actively displaces the tongue, allowing for a greater cross-sectional area for MV. The
investigators hypothesize that, while using the same ventilatory pressure in neuromuscularly
blocked patients with predictors for difficult mask ventilation, MV with an AOA will not
result in smaller expired tidal volumes than MV with a similarly sized Guedel oral airway
(GDA). In other words, the AOA will be non-inferior to the GDA in terms of expired tidal
volumes.
morbidity and mortality. The Articulating Oral Airway (AOA) is a novel oral airway which
actively displaces the tongue, allowing for a greater cross-sectional area for MV. The
investigators hypothesize that, while using the same ventilatory pressure in neuromuscularly
blocked patients with predictors for difficult mask ventilation, MV with an AOA will not
result in smaller expired tidal volumes than MV with a similarly sized Guedel oral airway
(GDA). In other words, the AOA will be non-inferior to the GDA in terms of expired tidal
volumes.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Individuals demonstrating 2 or greater predictors of difficult mask ventilation (as
listed below) who are scheduled for elective surgery with general anesthesia and
asleep mask ventilation/orotracheal intubation utilizing long-acting neuromuscular
blockade.
- Predictors of difficult mask ventilation i) Age > 55 years ii) BMI > 30kg/m2 iii)
Beard iv) Lack of teeth v) History of snoring
Exclusion Criteria:
- Documented history of impossible mask ventilation
- Planned omission of mask ventilation ('rapid-sequence induction,' etc.)
- Planned omission of long-acting paralytics
- Need for awake airway management
- Need for emergent airway protection
- Presence of oropharyngeal anatomic abnormalities
- Distance from the maxillary incisors to the angle of the mandible <11cm
- <18 years of age
- Known pregnant state
- Current incarceration
- Refusal to be involved in the study
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