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Despite the training and skills of airway managers, airway management complications still occur and may cause patient harm or death. The causes are multifactorial and may include patient, environment and clinician factors. Airway complications likely contribute to a significant proportion of deaths due to anaesthesia and are certainly more common outside the operating theatre and especially in the critical care unit. Reported incidences of failure and harm during airway management vary depending on the population studied and definitions used. Numbers may be of less value than understanding themes that help us improve care and reduce harm. The chapter emphasises that conventional research (e.g. device evaluation studies and randomised controlled trials) may be of little use in identifying low frequency events and complications because of their restricted inclusion and exclusion criteria, the use of devices only by experts and in conventional settings and because of their focus on efficacy rather than safety. The chapter highlights the important and growing role of registries and databases. Several are described in detail including the 4th National Audit Project and the Dutch ‘mini-NAP’. The value and limitations of litigation databases are explored. Specific complications of note are described at the end of the chapter.
The pulmonary aspiration of gastric contents can cause a pneumonitis with bronchospasm and pulmonary oedema if acidic liquid is inhaled, or less often airway obstruction or massive atelectasis if particulate matter is inhaled. Cricoid pressure can cause problems with the airway. It is important that cricoid pressure is released or adjusted to become Optimal External Laryngeal Pressure (OELP) if intubation is difficult as this may improve the view at laryngoscopy. The three-finger technique to apply cricoid pressure described by Sellick is actually almost impossible to apply when the patient's head is resting on a pillow. The incidence of regurgitation is not known following intravenous induction of anaesthesia with muscle relaxants, without cricoid pressure applied in patients at high risk. During a rapid sequence induction, intubation has failed after two unsuccessful attempts at laryngoscopy both using the gum elastic bougie.
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