Nasal intubation
Indications
- Severe cervical spine disease/instability
- Intra-oral masses or other limiting pathology such as mandibular fixation
- Trismus
- Severe angioedema
Contraindications
Absolute
- Epiglottitis
- Significant midface fractures
- Basilar skull fractures
Relative
- Large nasal masses
- Nasal foreign body
- Recent nasal instrumentation
- Nasal or upper airway hematoma/infection
- Epistaxis
Awake Technique
- Sniffing position (like oral ET)
- Pretreat with lido, hurricaine, or 4cc nebulized lidocaine for 5 minutes
- Also consider topical cocaine to the nares, typically 4% solution, for 2-3 minutes or intranasal phenylephrine
- Tube size = 1.0 mm smaller
- Listen with stethoscope at end of tube (breath sounds become louder as tube approaches cords)
- When tube hits cords patient will cough, back up 1 or 2 cm. wait for beginning of inspiration, as patient begins inspiration advance 3-4 cm (tube should be 22-26cm in women, 23-28cm in men)
- Tips:
- Occlude other nostril to hear better
- Cricoid pressure when advancing
- Use a small suction catheter as a seldinger guide
- Precurve tube before insertion.
Sedated Technique
- Prepare Afrin in 10 cc syringe, nasal trumpet, nasal tube (or smaller ETT) without stylet, DL blade, McGills/long curved Kellys
- Afrin in both nostrils
- Nasal trumpet into right nostril to dilate nasal airway (R nostril = less bleeding, faster[1]
- Insert tube in a postero-inferior direction (may feel some crunching along ethmoid, so be careful along that surface)
- DL to visualize tube insertion past vocal cords
- McGills or Kellys to grasp tube tip and facilitate passing tube
See Also
References
- Boku et al. Which nostril should be used for nasotracheal intubation: the right or left? A randomized clinical trial. J Clin Anesth. 2014 Aug;26(5):390-4.
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