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Innovative Approach to Difficult Airway Management: Utilizing the Cook® Airway Exchange Catheter for Double-Lumen Tube Intubation.

Adrien MaseriPierre IstaGaspard LeclercqQuentin DelhezAnne-Sophie Dincq
Published in: The American journal of case reports (2024)
BACKGROUND The Cook® Airway ExchangeCatheter (Cook® AEC, Cook Group Incorporated, Bloomington, Indiana, USA) is an 83-cm-long graduated hollow tube with an external diameter of 11, 14, or 19 French, commonly used for tracheal tube replacement. Although this application is reliable in the exchange of single-lumen tubes, the failure rate markedly rises during the exchange from a single-lumen to a double-lumen endotracheal tube. It is also often used as a bridge to extubation in patients with difficult airways and for oxygenation support applications. CASE REPORT We describe the case of a 58-year-old patient with unexpected difficult airway management. He was scheduled to undergo a minimally invasive hybrid esophagectomy (laparoscopic abdominal stage followed by an open right thoracotomy, requiring one-lung ventilation with a double-lumen tube). After the laparoscopic abdominal stage, performed with a single-lumen endotracheal tube, we exchanged it for a double-lumen endotracheal tube. After several unsuccessful exchanges with a Cook® Airway Exchange Catheter due to the flexibility of the exchange catheter, we decided to use the exchange catheter as a method to maintain adequate ventilation while using it as a target to facilitate tracheal intubation alongside it, using a videolaryngoscope. CONCLUSIONS This case report discusses an unusual use of the Cook® Airway ExchangeCatheter during videolaryngoscopic double-lumen endotracheal tube (DLT) intubation. It reviews previously documented uses in the literature, while highlighting the possibility of failure during tube exchange. It also highlights its value as a support for oxygenation and ventilation during difficult intubation attempts.
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