Innovative Endotracheal Tube Design Reduces Postoperative Laryngeal Injury
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Laryngeal Injury
- Sponsor
- University Hospital of the Nuestra Señora de Candelaria
- Enrollment
- 68
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Laryngeal injury
- Status
- Active, not recruiting
- Last Updated
- 2 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to compare two different orotracheal tubes in patients which require orotracheal intubation for general anesthesia. The main questions it aims to answer are:
- To assess the presence of laryngeal injury
- To evaluate the consequences in voice quality
- To ask for the presence of symptoms as sore throat, hoarseness, and cough
Participants will be randomly assigned into two groups, one will use conventional endotracheal tube and the other will use Triglotix® endotracheal tube.
Detailed Description
Endotracheal intubation is necessary in some patients undergoing surgical procedures and patients requiring mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit. However, endotracheal intubation is associated with known complications. In post-surgical patients subjected to orotracheal intubation, the incidence of dysphagia, sore throat, hoarseness and cough is 43%,38%27%,32% respectivelly. These figures increase in cases of prolonged intubation, such as those in intensive care units, where reported rates are 76% for sore throat, 63% for hoarseness and 49% for dysphagia. No significant endotracheal tube design improvements have been developed over the past few decades addressing these issues. The present study aims to compare the incidence of laryngeal injuries, and related symptoms as sore throat, hoarseness, swallowing problems, bucking and coughing between two defined sample populations: those utilizing a conventional endotracheal tube (ETT-C) and those employing the new Triglotix® endotracheal tube (ETT-T) in patients undergoing elective surgery requiring general anesthesia and mechanical ventilation.
Investigators
Pedro Luis Bravo
Director
University Hospital of the Nuestra Señora de Candelaria
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Elective perianal surgery requiring intubation for general anesthesia
- •Duration range 30-90 minutes
Exclusion Criteria
- •Difficult airway
- •American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status (ASA) \> III
- •Morbid obesity (body mass index \>40 kg/m2)
- •Patients not suitable for outpatient surgery
- •Patients with history of previous neck surgery
- •Patients with history of dysphagia
- •Patients with comorbidities as diabetes and hypertension.
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Laryngeal injury
Time Frame: Immediately before the induction and 45 minutes after the end of the procedure
Laryngeal pathology was assessed based on the location (unilateral: right/left or bilateral) and on morphology: grade 0 = no lesions, grade 1 = superficial erythema (redness of the mucosa without surrounding inflammation), grade 2 = oedema (swollen mucosa at the vocal cords), grade 3 haematoma (redness of the mucosa with surrounding inflammatory swelling), grade 4 = mucosal laceration (causing active bleeding into the vocal cords), grade 5 = arytenoid dislocation or subluxation (arytenoid with limited movement), and grade 6 = vocal cord palsy
Secondary Outcomes
- Postoperative cough(45 minutes after the end of the procedure)
- Bucking during extubation(During extubation)
- Acoustic Voice Quality Index 03.01 (AVQIv3)(Immediately before the induction and 45 minutes after the end of the procedure)
- Acoustic Breathiness Index (ABI)(Immediately before the induction and 45 minutes after the end of the procedure)