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 Spine |
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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