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We developed a suction laryngoscope, which enables simultaneous suction and laryngoscopy in cases of airway haemorrhage and evaluated its potential benefits in physicians with varying emergency medical service experience. Eighteen physicians with regular and 24 physicians with occasional emergency medical service experience intubated the trachea of a manikin with severe simulated airway haemorrhage using the suction laryngoscope and the Macintosh laryngoscope in random order. In physicians with regular emergency medical service experience, there was neither a difference in time needed for intubation [median (IQR, CI 95%)]: 34 (18, 30-46) vs. 34 (22, 30-52) s; P=0.52, nor in the number of oesophageal intubations [0/18 (0%) vs. 3/18 (16.7%); P=NS] when using the suction vs. the Macintosh laryngoscope. In physicians with occasional emergency medical service experience, there was no difference in time needed for intubation [median (IQR, CI 95%)]: 42 (25, 41-57) vs. 45 (33, 41-65) s; P=0.56, but the number of oesophageal intubations was significantly lower when using the suction laryngoscope [4/24 (16.7%) vs. 12/24 (50.0%); P=0.04]. In a model of severe simulated airway haemorrhage, employing a suction laryngoscope significantly decreased the likelihood of oesophageal intubations in physicians with occasional emergency medical service experience.

Citation

Thomas Mitterlechner, Sonja Maisch, Wolfgang A Wetsch, Holger Herff, Peter Paal, Karl H Stadlbauer, Alexander M Strasak, Karl H Lindner, Volker Wenzel. A suction laryngoscope facilitates intubation for physicians with occasional emergency medical service experience--a manikin study with severe simulated airway haemorrhage. Resuscitation. 2009 Jun;80(6):693-5

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PMID: 19362766

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