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Apnoeic oxygenation in morbid obesity: a randomised controlled trial comparing facemask and high-flow nasal oxygen delivery

John Schutzer-Weissmann, T. Wojcikiewicz, Anil Karmali, Asta Lukosiute, Ruoyi Sun, Rafiq Kanji, Ahmed R. Ahmed, Sanjay Purkayastha, Stephen J. Brett, Jonathan Cousins

2022British Journal of Anaesthesia57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obesity is a risk factor for airway-related incidents during anaesthesia. High-flow nasal oxygen has been advocated to improve safety in high-risk groups, but its effectiveness in the obese population is uncertain. This study compared the effect of high-flow nasal oxygen and low-flow facemask oxygen delivery on duration of apnoea in morbidly obese patients. METHODS: ) oxygen. After induction of anaesthesia, the patients were apnoeic for 18 min or until peripheral oxygen saturation decreased to 92%. RESULTS: Eighty patients were studied (41 High-Flow Nasal Oxygen, 39 Facemask). The median apnoea time was 18 min in both the High-Flow Nasal Oxygen (IQR 18-18 min) and the Facemask (inter-quartile range [IQR], 4.1-18 min) groups. Five patients in the High-Flow Nasal Oxygen group and 14 patients in the Facemask group desaturated to 92% within 18 min. The risk of desaturation was significantly lower in the High-Flow Nasal Oxygen group (hazard ratio=0.27; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.11-0.65; P=0.007). CONCLUSIONS: In experienced hands, apnoeic oxygenation is possible in morbidly obese patients, and oxygen desaturation did not occur for 18 min in the majority of patients, whether oxygen delivery was high-flow nasal or low-flow facemask. High-flow nasal oxygen may reduce desaturation risk compared with facemask oxygen. Desaturation risk is a more clinically relevant outcome than duration of apnoea. Individual physiological factors are likely to be the primary determinant of risk rather than method of oxygen delivery. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT03428256.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAnesthesiaOxygenationContinuous positive airway pressureOxygen saturationPopulationOxygenObstructive sleep apneaEnvironmental healthOrganic chemistryChemistryAirway Management and Intubation TechniquesNasal Surgery and Airway StudiesObstructive Sleep Apnea Research
Apnoeic oxygenation in morbid obesity: a randomised controlled trial comparing facemask and high-flow nasal oxygen delivery | Litcius