Combitube insertion in the situation of acute airway obstruction after extubation in patients underwent two-jaw surgery

J Dent Anesth Pain Med. 2015 Dec;15(4):235-239. doi: 10.17245/jdapm.2015.15.4.235. Epub 2015 Dec 31.

Abstract

The Combitube is an emergency airway-maintaining device, which can supply oxygen to dyspneic patients in emergency situations following two-jaw surgery. These patients experience difficulty in opening the mouth or have a partially obstructed airway caused by edema or hematoma in the oral cavity. As such, they cannot maintain the normal airway. The use of a Combitube may be favorable compared to the laryngeal mask airway because it is a thin and relatively resilient tube. A healthy 24-year-old man was dyspneic after extubation. Oxygen saturation fell below 90% despite untying the bimaxillary fixation and ambubagging. The opening of the mouth was narrow; thus, emergency airway maintenance was gained by insertion of a Combitube. The following day, a facial computer tomography revealed that the airway space narrowing was severe compared to its pre-operational state. After the swelling subsided, the patient was successfully extubated without complications.

Keywords: Airway obstruction; Combitube; Extubation; Post-anesthesia complication, Two-jaw surgery.

Publication types

  • Case Reports