Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Journal

Frontiers in Medicine

Abstract

Background: Surgical retraction to expose the vertebrae during anterior cervical spine surgery increases tracheal tube cuff pressure and may worsen postoperative sore throat and dysphonia. This randomized double-blind study investigated the effect of cuff shape on intraoperative cuff pressure and postoperative sore throat and dysphonia.

Methods: Eighty patients were randomized to tracheal intubation with a tapered cuff or a conventional cylindrical high-volume low-pressure cuff (control) during anesthesia. Intraoperative cuff pressures were compared. The primary outcome was the incidence of pressure adjustment needed when the cuff pressure increased to > 25 mm Hg after surgical retraction. The secondary outcome was the incidence of postoperative sore throat and dysphonia.

Results: The incidence of pressure adjustment after surgical retraction was significantly lower in the tapered group than in the control group (13% vs. 48%; P = 0.001; relative risk reduction, 74%). The median [interquartile range (IQR)] cuff pressure (mm Hg) was significantly lower for the tapered cuff than for the control cuff before surgical retraction [9 (7-12) vs. 12 (10-15); P < 0.001] and after retraction [18 (15-23) vs. 25 (18-31); P = 0.007]. The median (IQR) postoperative dysphonia score assessed by a single speech-language pathologist was lower in the tapered group than in the control group [4 (3-6) vs. 5.5 (5-7); P = 0.008].

Conclusion: A tapered cuff tracheal tube decreased the need for the adjustment of cuff pressure after surgical retraction during anterior cervical spine surgery, thereby avoiding intraoperative pressure increase. It also has a better outcome in terms of dysphonia.

Clinical trial registration: [www.clinicaltrials.gov], identifier [NCT04591769].

DOI

10.3389/fmed.2022.920726

PMID

35847807

PMCID

PMC9276934

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

6-29-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

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