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Impact of universal use of the McGrath videolaryngoscope as a device for all intubations in the cardiac operating room: a prospective before-after VIDEOLAR-CAR study

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http://hdl.handle.net/2183/36154
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC-BY-NC 4.0)
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC-BY-NC 4.0)
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Title
Impact of universal use of the McGrath videolaryngoscope as a device for all intubations in the cardiac operating room: a prospective before-after VIDEOLAR-CAR study
Author(s)
Taboada, Manuel
Estany-Gestal, Ana
Rial, María
Cariñena Amigo, Agustín
Martínez, Adrián
Selas, Salomé
Eiras, María
Veiras, Sonia
Ferreiroa, Esteban
Cardalda, Borja
López, Carmen
Calvo, Andrea
Fernández, Jorge
Álvarez, Julián
Alcántara, Jorge Miguel
Date
2024-03-15
Citation
Taboada M, Estany-Gestal A, Rial M, Cariñena A, Martínez A, Selas S, Eiras M, Veiras S, Ferreiroa E, Cardalda B, López C, Calvo A, Fernández J, Álvarez J, Alcántara JM, Seoane-Pillado T. Impact of universal use of the McGrath videolaryngoscope as a device for all intubations in the cardiac operating room: a prospective before-after VIDEOLAR-CAR study. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2024 Mar 15:S1053-0770(24)00181-2. Epub ahead of print.
Abstract
[Abstract] Objective: Tracheal intubation in cardiac surgery patients has a higher incidence of difficult laryngoscopic views compared with patients undergoing other types of surgery. The authors hypothesized that using the McGrath Mac videolaryngoscope as the first intubation option for cardiac surgery patients improves the percentage of patients with "easy intubation" compared with using a direct Macintosh laryngoscope. Design: A prospective, observational, before-after study. Setting: At a tertiary-care hospital. Participants: One thousand one hundred nine patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Intervention: Consecutive patients undergoing cardiac surgery were intubated using, as the first option, a Macintosh laryngoscope (preinterventional phase) or a McGrath Mac videolaryngoscope (interventional phase). Measurements and main results: The main objective was to assess whether the use of the McGrath videolaryngoscope, as the first intubation option, improves the percentage of patients with "easy intubation," defined as successful intubation on the first attempt, modified Cormack-Lehane grades of I or IIa, and the absence of the need for adjuvant airway devices. A total of 1,109 patients were included, 801 in the noninterventional phase and 308 in the interventional phase. The incidence of "easy intubation" was 93% in the interventional phase versus 78% in the noninterventional phase (p < 0.001). First-success-rate intubation was higher in the interventional phase (304/308; 98.7%) compared with the noninterventional phase (754/801, 94.1%; p = 0.005). Intubation in the interventional phase showed decreases in the incidence of difficult laryngoscopy (12/308 [3.9%] v 157/801 [19.6%]; p < 0.001), as well as moderate or difficult intubation (5/308 [1.6%] v 57/801 [7.1%]; p < 0.001). Conclusions: The use of the McGrath videolaryngoscope as the first intubation option for tracheal intubation in cardiac surgery improves the percentage of patients with "easy" intubation," increasing glottic view and first-success-rate intubation and decreasing the incidence of moderate or difficult intubation.
Editor version
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.jvca.2024.03.016
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC-BY-NC 4.0)
ISSN
1053-0770

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