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ArticlesCritical Care

Early laryngeal injury and complications because of endotracheal intubation in acutely poisoned patients: a prospective observational study

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Pages 331-336 | Received 22 Nov 2009, Accepted 23 Mar 2010, Published online: 27 May 2010
 

Abstract

Objective. Tracheal intubation may represent a life-saving supportive measure in many acutely poisoned patients. Although considered as a safe procedure, intubation may rapidly damage laryngeal mucosa. The incidence and nature of short-duration intubation-associated laryngeal injuries are unknown in the population of poisoned patients. Methods. We designed a prospective clinical investigation to study intubation-related laryngeal complications in poisonings. All consecutive intubated poisoned patients admitted over a 20-month period in our toxicological intensive care unit in a teaching hospital were included in this study. Daily clinical observation and laryngeal fiberscopic evaluation were performed to assess intubation-related laryngeal complications. Results. We included 266 consecutive poisoned patients who had been intubated [116M/150F; age 41 years (31–53); median (25–75% percentiles); simplified acute physiology score II 43 (32–51); intubation time 24 h (13–52)]. Intubation was mainly performed at the scene (69%) and depended on the level of coma (89%). Complications included postextubation laryngeal dyspnea (9%) requiring mandatory reintubation (2%). Laryngoscopy was performed in 209 patients (79%) within 24 h after extubation. Eighty percent of patients presented significant initial laryngeal lesions. Stepwise logistic regression showed that two variables were predictive of injuries: female gender (odds ratio: 2.6; 95% confidence interval: 1.3–5.3) and intubation time ≥72 h (odds ratio: 6.4; confidence interval: 1.5–27.6). Overall, injuries were independent of age, severity of illness, coma level, vital signs, intoxicants, and intubation modalities. The most severe injuries were significantly associated with intubation time (p < 0.001) and simplified acute physiology score II (p = 0.04). Within 24 h following extubation, persistent dysphonia (p < 0.0001), dysphagia (p < 0.0001), or pharyngeal pain (p = 0.02) were predictive of laryngeal injury. Conclusions. Despite short-duration intubation, poisoned patients are at high risk of initial laryngeal injury.

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