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Br J Anaesth ; 117 Suppl 1: i92-i96, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27307290

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pressures (Pe) exerted by bronchial blockers on the inner wall of the bronchi may cause mucosal ischaemia. Our aims were as follows: (i) to compare the intracuff pressure (Pi) and Pe exerted by commercially available bronchial blockers in an in vitro and an ex vivo model; (ii) to investigate the influence of both the inflated intracuff volume and cuff diameter on Pe; and (iii) to estimate the minimal sealing volume (VSmin) and the corresponding Pe for each bronchial blocker studied. METHODS: The Pe exerted by seven commercial bronchial blockers was measured at different inflation volumes using a custom-designed system using in vitro and ex vivo animal models with two internal diameters (12 and 15 mm). RESULTS: In the same conditions, Pi was significantly lower than Pe (P<0.05), and Pe was higher in the in vitro model than in the ex vivo model. The Pe increased with the inflated volume, with use of the small-diameter model (P<0.05). Ex vivo models needed a higher minimal sealing volume than the in vitro models, and this volume increased with the diameter (e.g. the VSmin at a positive pressure of 25 cm H2O required a Pe ranging from 12 to 78 mm Hg on the 15 mm ex vivo model and from 66 to 110 mm Hg on the 12 mm ex vivo model). CONCLUSIONS: The Pi cannot be used to approximate Pe. The diameter of the model, the inflated volume, and the bronchial blocker design all influence Pe. A pressure higher than the critical ischaemic threshold (i.e. 25 mm Hg) was needed to prevent air leak around the cuff in the in vitro and ex vivo models.


Subject(s)
Bronchi/physiology , Intubation, Intratracheal/instrumentation , One-Lung Ventilation/instrumentation , Thoracic Surgical Procedures/instrumentation , Animals , Bronchi/anatomy & histology , Equipment Design , Humans , Intubation, Intratracheal/adverse effects , Intubation, Intratracheal/methods , Models, Anatomic , Models, Animal , One-Lung Ventilation/adverse effects , Pressure , Sus scrofa
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