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Endotracheal tube

 

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Endotracheal tube



 
 
An endotracheal tube (also called an ET tube or ETT) is used in general anaesthesia
General anaesthesia

In modern medical practice, general anaesthesia is a state of total unconsciousness resulting from general anaesthetic drugs. A variety of drugs are given to the patient that have different effects with the overall aim of ensuring unconsciousness, amnesia and analgesia....
, intensive care and emergency medicine
Emergency medicine

Emergency medicine is a speciality of medicine that focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of acute illnesses and injuries that require immediate medical attention....
 for airway management
Airway management

In cardiopulmonary resuscitation, anaesthesia, emergency medicine, intensive care medicine and first aid, airway management is the process of ensuring that:...
 and mechanical ventilation
Mechanical ventilation

In medicine, mechanical ventilation is a method to mechanically assist or replace spontaneous respiration .Mechanical ventilation is typically used after an invasive intubation, a procedure wherein an endotracheal tube or tracheostomy tube is inserted into the airway....
. The tube is inserted into a patient's trachea
Vertebrate trachea

The traceartes, or windpipe, is a tube that has an inner diameter of about 20-25 mm and a length of about 10-16 cm in humans. It commences at the larynx and bifurcates into the primary bronchus in mammals, and from the pharynx to the syrinx in birds, allowing the passage of air to the lungs....
 in order to ensure that the airway is not closed off and that air is able to reach the lung
Lung

The lung is the essential respiration organ in air-breathing animals, including most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart....
s.






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Endotracheal Tube Inserted
An endotracheal tube (also called an ET tube or ETT) is used in general anaesthesia
General anaesthesia

In modern medical practice, general anaesthesia is a state of total unconsciousness resulting from general anaesthetic drugs. A variety of drugs are given to the patient that have different effects with the overall aim of ensuring unconsciousness, amnesia and analgesia....
, intensive care and emergency medicine
Emergency medicine

Emergency medicine is a speciality of medicine that focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of acute illnesses and injuries that require immediate medical attention....
 for airway management
Airway management

In cardiopulmonary resuscitation, anaesthesia, emergency medicine, intensive care medicine and first aid, airway management is the process of ensuring that:...
 and mechanical ventilation
Mechanical ventilation

In medicine, mechanical ventilation is a method to mechanically assist or replace spontaneous respiration .Mechanical ventilation is typically used after an invasive intubation, a procedure wherein an endotracheal tube or tracheostomy tube is inserted into the airway....
. The tube is inserted into a patient's trachea
Vertebrate trachea

The traceartes, or windpipe, is a tube that has an inner diameter of about 20-25 mm and a length of about 10-16 cm in humans. It commences at the larynx and bifurcates into the primary bronchus in mammals, and from the pharynx to the syrinx in birds, allowing the passage of air to the lungs....
 in order to ensure that the airway is not closed off and that air is able to reach the lung
Lung

The lung is the essential respiration organ in air-breathing animals, including most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart....
s. The endotracheal tube is regarded as the most reliable available method for protecting a patient's airway.

Inventor

Sir Ivan Whiteside Magill
Ivan Magill

Ivan Whiteside Magill was an Irish born anaesthetist who is famous for his involvement in much of the innovation and development in modern anaesthesia....
 (1888-1986) was an Irish born anaesthetist who is famous for his involvement in much of the innovation and development in modern anaesthesia.

Originally a general practitioner, he accepted a post at the Queen's Hospital, Sidcup
Sidcup

Sidcup is a suburban development in the London Borough of Bexley, South East London. Located south east of Charing Cross. Sidcup is bordered by both the London Borough of Bromley and Kent County Council and whilst now part of Greater London, was once referred to as the gateway to Kent....
 in 1919 as an anaesthetist. The hospital had been established for the treatment of facial injuries sustained in the World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
. Working with plastic surgeon Harold Gillies
Harold Gillies

Sir Harold Delf Gillies was a New Zealand-born, and later London based, Otolaryngology who is widely considered as the father of plastic surgery....
, he was responsible for the development of numerous items of anaesthetic equipment but most particularly the single-tube technique of endotracheal anaesthesia. This was driven by the immense difficulties of administering "standard" anaesthetics such as chloroform
Chloroform

Chloroform, also known as trichloromethane and methyl trichloride, is a chemical compound with chemical formula CarbonHydrogenChlorine3....
 and ether
Ether

Ether is a class of organic compounds which contain an ether functional group ? an oxygen atom connected to two alkyl or aryl groups ? of general formula R?O?R....
 to men with severe facial injury using masks; they would cover the operative field. Following the closure of the hospital, and the diminishing numbers of patients seen from the war era, he continued to work with Gillies in private practice but was also appointed to the Westminster Hospital
Westminster Hospital

Westminster Hospital was founded in 1719, following a meeting in a coffee house, where four men met to discuss a "charitable proposal for relieving the sick and needy and other distressed persons?.....
 and Brompton Hospital in London.

He was Knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1960.

The original tubes were cut from a roll of rubber industrial tubing by his assistant, hence the natural curve of the tube. A curved metal adaptor was designed (Magill oral & nasal connectors) and a 4" black rubber connecting hose to fit to the anaesthetic circuit was adapted from an MG brake hose and named the 'catheter mount' by Magill's theatre technician at Westminster Hospital. Originally, there was no inflatable cuff, the tube was packed either side of the sub-glottis by two green anaesthetic swabs, with ribbon gauze sewn on by hand to aid extraction at extubation of the ETT. Anaesthetic gel or ointment was used to lubricate the tube and provide some relief for the patients sore throat post procedure.

Portex Medical (England and France) produced the first cuffless plastic 'Ivory' ET tubes, in conjunction with Dr. Magill's design later adding a cuff as manufacturing techniques became more viable, these were glued on by hand to make the famous Blue-line tube copied by many other manufacturers.

Mallinckrodt GmBH developed the disposable ETT and produced a plethora of design variations, adding the 'Murphy Eye' to their tubes in case of 'accidental' placement of the tube to avoid right bronchial occlusion.

David S. Sheridan
David S. Sheridan

David S. Sheridan was the inventor of the "disposable" plastic endotracheal tube.David was the second of six sons of Adolf and Anna Sockolof, who immigrated to the United States from Russia....
 was one of the manufacturers of the American markets "disposable" plastic endotracheal tube now used routinely in surgery. Previously, red rubber (Rusch-Germany) tubes were used, then sterilized for re-use which carried a small a risk of infection.

He also held more than 50 medical instrument patents. Mr Sheridan died April 29 2004 in Argyle, New York
Argyle, New York

Argyle, New York, refers to one of the following two locations in New York State:*Argyle , New York, or*Argyle , New York...
 at the age of 95.

Intubation

Intubation

The process of inserting an ETT is called intubation
Intubation

In medicine, intubation refers to the placement of a tube into an external or internal orifice of the body. Although the term can refer to endoscopy procedures, it is most often used to denote tracheal intubation....
. Intubation usually requires general anaesthesia
General anaesthesia

In modern medical practice, general anaesthesia is a state of total unconsciousness resulting from general anaesthetic drugs. A variety of drugs are given to the patient that have different effects with the overall aim of ensuring unconsciousness, amnesia and analgesia....
 and muscle relaxation
Muscle relaxant

A muscle relaxant is a drug which affects skeletal muscle function and decreases the muscle tone. It may be used to alleviate symptoms such as muscle spasms, pain, and hyperreflexia....
 but can be achieved in the awake patient with local anaesthesia or in an emergency without any anaesthesia, although this is extremely uncomfortable and generally avoided in other circumstances.

It is usually performed by visualising the larynx by means of a hand-held laryngoscope
Laryngoscope

A laryngoscope is a medical instrument that is used to obtain a view of the vocal folds and the glottis, which is the space between the cords....
 that has a variety of curved and straight blades, with a light source. Intubation can also be performed "blind" or with the use of the attendant's fingers (this is called digital intubation).

Intubation aids: A stylet can be used inside the endotracheal tube. The malleable metal stylet is a bendable piece of metal inserted into the ETT as to make the tube more stiff for easier insertion, or to provide more curvature to the tip in difficult cases. This is then removed after the intubation and a ventilator or self-inflating bag is attached to the ETT.

The goal is to position the end of the ETT 2 centimeters above the bifurcation of the lungs or the carina. If inserted too far into the trachea it often goes into the right main bronchus (the right main brochus is less angled than the left.

Indications of ETT:

1- Cardiac arrest,in which ventilation with mask either impossible or ineffective 2- Respiratory arrest, when the oxygenation with noninvasive methods is inadequate 3- Patient unable to protect airways(cardiac arrest, coma. areflexia) 4- general anaesthesia

Types of tracheal tube

Types of endotracheal tube (ETT) include oral or nasal, cuffed or un-cuffed, preformed (eg RAE tube), reinforced tubes, double-lumen tubes and tracheostomy tubes. For human use, tubes range in size from 2-10.5 mm in internal diameter (ID). The size is chosen based on the patient's body size, with the smaller sizes being used for paediatric and neonatal patients. Tubes larger than 6 mm ID usually have an inflatable cuff.

Originally made from red rubber
Rubber

Natural rubber is an elastomer?an Elasticity_ hydrocarbon polymer?that was originally derived from a milky colloidal suspension, or latex , found in the sap of some plants....
, most modern tubes are made from pvc
PVC

Polyvinyl chloride is a plastic.PVC may also refer to:*Param Vir Chakra, India's highest military honor*Peripheral venous catheter*Permanent virtual circuit, a term used in telecommunications and computer networks...
. Those placed in a laser field may be flexometallic.

Dr. Robertshaw (and others) developed double-lumen endo-bronchial tubes for intra-thoracic surgery. These allow single-lung ventilation whilst the other lung is collapsed to make surgery easier. The deflated lung is re-inflated as surgery finishes to check for fistulas (tears).

Another type of endotracheal tube has a small second lumen opening above the inflatable cuff, which can be used for suction of the nasopharngeal area and above the cuff to aid extubation (removal). This allows suctioning of secretions which sit above the cuff which helps reduce the risk of chest infections in long-term intubated patients.

A shortened tube, a tracheostomy tube, can be inserted through an opening in the neck (a tracheostomy) into the trachea. This is often a temporary stoma, but patients can live with them permanently.

Footnotes

Gowning and eye protection is not required during routine suctioning if the patient has not been diagnosed with an active infection and spreading by droplets is not an issue. If the patient is not currently active with an ongoing infection and is not currently on isolation precautions, standard precautions should be followed per CDC guidelines and standard use of gloves should be followed.

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