Mnemonics for difficult airway predictors

Posted by Javier Benitez, MD on

Can you list the difficult airway predictors? Do you know the mnemonics: MOANS, LEMON, RODS, and SHORT?


1. Difficult Bag-Mask Ventilation (MOANS)

Mask seal Bushy beards, crusted blood on the face, or disruption of lower facial continuity
Obesity / Obstruction Obesity, pregnancy, angioedema, Ludwig’s angina, upper airway abscess, epiglottitis
Age Age > 55
No teeth May leave denture in edentulous patients.
Sleep apnea / Stiff lungs COPD, asthma, ARDS, others

Mallampati classification

2. Difficult Laryngoscopy and Intubation (LEMON)

Look externally Use your clinical gestalt, evidence of lower facial disruption, bleeding, small mouth, agitated patient
Evaluate Use the 3-3-2 rule: mouth open, mandible, glottis
Mallampati score In order of increasing difficulty Class I-IV
Obstruction / Obesity Four cardinal signs of upper airway obstruction: stridor, muffled voice, difficulty swallowing secretions, sensation of dyspnea. Obese patients frequently have poor glottic views.
Neck mobility May not be able to optimally move the head and neck due to trauma, arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis. Immobilize the neck and consider using video laryngoscopy.

3. Difficult Extraglottic Device (RODS)

R estricted mouth opening
O bstruction
D isrupted or D istorted airway
S tiff lung or cervical S pine

4. Difficult Cricothyrotomy (SHORT)

S urgery or other airway obstruction
H ematoma (includes infection/abscess)
O besity
R adiation distortion (and other deformity)
T umor


There are no absolute contraindications to performing an emergency cricothyrotomy.

References
Walls R, Murphy M. Chapter 7: Identification of the Difficult Airway. Manual of Emergency Airway Management. Third Edition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

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Javier Benitez, MD

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