Archives of Anesthesia and Critical Care (Jul 2023)

A Comparison of Laryngospasm in "No Touch" and "Head Down Deep Extubation": A Randomized Clinical Trials

  • Niyoosha Yoosefi,
  • Fatemeh Hajimohammadi,
  • Arash Jafarieh,
  • Hamed Abdollahi,
  • Afshar Etemadi Ale Agha,
  • Mehrdad Behzadi,
  • Nader Ali Nazemian,
  • Mina Abdolahi,
  • Mohammad Gholizadeh,
  • Abolghasem Yousefi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18502/aacc.v9i5.13956
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. Supplement

Abstract

Read online

Background: Tonsillectomy and adenotonsillectomy are simple surgical procedures that can cause laryngospasm as complications which blocks airflow causing serious issues. The laryngospasm incidence decreases in patients undergoing deep extubation. Present study aimed to compare laryngospasm in innovative method of head down deep extubation with No Touch method. Methods: Forty-two patients were enrolled in the study in (23 females and 19 males) between the ages of 5 up to 15 who were referred for tonsillectomy or adenotonsillectomy. The patients were divided into two randomized No Touch (n=21) and head down deep extubation (n=21) intervention groups according to permuted block randomization. All patients received standard general anesthesia. The first group received the no-touch extubation and the second group received head down deep extubation method. The duration of surgery, Time interval between the injection of reverse drugs and the return of spontaneous breathing (TRDRSB), time interval between anesthesia drug withdrawal and extubation (TIDWE), SPO2, incidence of laryngospasm, and cough were recorded and graded according to their severity at 0, 5, 10, 15 minutes and 2 hours after extubation, respectfully. Results: The age, weight, gender and duration of surgery, TRDRSB was not statistically different between the two groups but TIDWE showed a significant difference between groups (P<0.001). The SPO2 levels in 0, 5, 10, 15 minutes, and 2 hours after surgery were not significantly different between the “no touch” and “head down deep extubation” groups as well as the severity of coughing and laryngospasm. However, the rate of laryngospasm and cough in "No touch" group was higher than " head down deep extubation " group. Conclusion: HDDE is an innovative technique that it seems in comparison to No Touch method can reduce the incidence of laryngospasm. However, further comprehensive trials are needed to confirm these findings.

Keywords