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Revista Cubana de Anestesiología y Reanimación
On-line version ISSN 1726-6718
Abstract
SEGURAS LLANES, Omar; SUAREZ GARCIA, Mónica; MARTINEZ SUAREZ, Carla and SEGURAS LLANES, Niurka. Jet ventilation during microsurgery of multiple laryngeal myxomas in a patient with anatomically difficult respiratory airway. Rev cuba anestesiol reanim [online]. 2019, vol.18, n.1 Epub June 30, 2019. ISSN 1726-6718.
Introduction:
The larynx microsurgery involves the dilemma of a surgical field that coincides spatially with that of access to the patient's airway. Myxomas, especially numerous and supra/subglottic, represent a therapeutic challenge. If together with this fact, the patient presents an anatomically difficult airway, the formula for the catastrophe just needs to mix both with a conventional ventilation plan. In this case, jet ventilation can be the choice to avoid a disaster situation.
Objective:
To describe the sequence of events and the outcomes when transcricotyroid jet ventilation was applied for the first time in the country.
Clinical case:
In the face of previous failure of an intervention using a traditional method of ventilation, in a second intention for exeresis of multiple laryngeal myxomas in a patient with anatomically difficult airway, after obtaining her informed consent, we proceeded to anesthetize to obtain a transcricothyroid access to the respiratory tract, to ventilate with jet flows through a 16G trocar. The intervention, planned for 15 min, was extended for 90 minutes without ventilatory or oxygenation complications. The patient was discharged without sequelae.
Conclusions:
Transcricotyroid jet ventilation was timely, safe and effective. Minor cardiovascular complications were easily controllable. Transcricotyroid jet ventilation was used for the first time in the country. This outcome stimulates the assimilation of jet ventilation technologies in elective or emerging contexts, such as the challenge of an anatomically difficult airway.
Keywords : jet ventilation; anatomically difficult respiratory airway; laryngeal microsurgery.