Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2742855 | Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Airway management provides gas exchange, protects the lungs from injury and permits treatment. This requires safe, effective and reliable use of equipment, often using several items in combination. An airway management plan with backup plans is vital, and correct equipment use needs correct knowledge, skill and attitudes to form an airway management strategy; a sequence of logical plans. There are five approaches to airway management in which equipment is used: facemask ventilation with or without adjuncts, airway clearance with suction or foreign body removal, use of supraglottic airway devices, tracheal intubation with a variety of laryngoscopes (including the flexible fibreoptic bronchoscope (FFOB)), and transtracheal access using cricothyroidotomy or tracheostomy. Tracheal tubes and aids for placement are described.