“Mouth to mouth ventilation”: A comparison of the laryngeal mask airway with the Laerdal Pocket Facemask |
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Authors: | R. Alexander J.P. Chinery H. Swales D. Sutton |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Anaesthetics, Worcestershire Royal Hospital, Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, Charles Hasting Road, Worcester WR5 1HN, United Kingdom;bDepartment of Anaesthetics, Selly Oak Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust, Raddlebarn Road, Birmingham. B29 6JD, United Kingdom;cShackleton Department of Anaesthetics, Southampton University Hospital, Tremona Road, Southampton SO16 6YD, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Ten nurses with basic airway management experience were formally trained to use a classic laryngeal mask airway (LMA) and a Laerdal Pocket Facemask (LPFM) for oxygen enriched expired air ventilation (EEAV). They then used both of these devices for EEAV in a randomised fashion in 100 anaesthetised ASA I/II patients for elective surgery. EEAV was considered successful if the patient's arterial oxygen saturation was maintained above 93% on room air for 3 min. EEAV success rates for the LMA and LPFM were 95% and 51% respectively (P = 0.03). There was no apparent learning curve for either apparatus. Mean time in seconds (s) for first successful ventilation from picking up the apparatus was 26.8 s and 15.1 s, for the LMA and LPFM respectively (P < 0.005). Although the LMA took significantly longer time to insert, it proved to be more successful and easier to use than the LPFM for EEAV. |
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Keywords: | Ventilation Artificial equipment Laryngeal mask airway Pocket Facemask Resuscitation Mouth to mouth |
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