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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07306325

Ultrasound in Predicting Difficult Intubation in Acromegaly Patients

Effectiveness of Ultrasonography in Evaluating the Airway and Predicting Difficult Intubation in Patients Diagnosed With Acromegaly

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
34 (estimated)
Sponsor
Başakşehir Çam & Sakura City Hospital · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a prospective observational study.The purpose of this study is to predict difficult intubation with ultrasonographic evaluation combined with preoperative physical examination in patients diagnosed with acromegaly and planned for pituitary surgery.

Detailed description

Airway management is an important issue for patient safety in anesthesia. Difficult ventilation and difficult intubation are important causes of anesthesia-related perioperative morbidity and mortality. It is reported that approximately 30% of anesthesia-related mortality is related to inadequacy in difficult airway management. The incidence of difficult intubation is 1.5-13.2% in the general population. Features evaluated for difficult airway risk prediction: age, gender, body mass index, weight, height, history of difficult intubation, facial and jaw features, mouth opening, head and neck mobility, prominent upper incisors, presence of beard, upper lip bite test, mallampati score, thyromental distance, hyomental distance , sternomental distance includes the distance between the incisors. Acromegaly is an endocrinological disease with significant mortality and morbidity due to high growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels. It usually occurs due to a pituitary tumor. Excessive GH secretion in adults causes acromegaly with overgrowth in the acral areas. Acral changes seen in these patients may cause abnormal airway structure and, accordingly, airway management may become difficult during anesthesia. Typically, large nose and tongue, thick mandible, and thick and large lips can be observed in acromegaly. There is hypertrophy in the pharynx, larynx, tonsil, vocal cords, mucosa and soft tissues. These features of acromegaly may cause difficult mask ventilation and difficult intubation. The incidence of difficult intubation is observed to be 10%-30% in acromegalic individuals. With developing technology, the use of ultrasonography in preoperative airway evaluation has become widespread. It is a real-time, non-invasive, easily accessible, mobile, safe, painless method that can be used to evaluate both the upper and lower airway. Clinical airway screening tests aim to predict difficult airways. Recent reviews have shown that ultrasonographic measurements have a greater predictive value than airway screening tests performed by physical examination. Measurements obtained from ultrasound include skin-vocal cord distance, skin-hyoid distance and skin-epiglotte distance. In the preoperative physical examination; Age, gender, height, weight, body mass index, mouth opening, neck extension, mallampati score, thyromental-hyomental and sternomental distance, neck circumference measurement and upper lip bite test will be evaluated. All airway ultrasonographic evaluations will be performed preoperatively by experienced anesthesiologists who have previously performed airway ultrasonography. Participants will be prepared for ultrasonographic evaluation in the supine position, and skin-hyoid bone, skin-epiglotte, skin-vocal cord anterior commissure distance measurements will be made and recorded. Intubation of the participants will be performed by experienced anesthesiologists who are unfamiliar with ultrasonography measurements.The assistive stylet used during the intubation of the participants, the need for cricoid pressure, the number of attempts, the number of practitioners and the glottis opening seen during laryngoscopy will be noted in accordance with the Cormack Lehane classification.Advanced airway devices will be used when necessary. Preoperative physical examination values, ultrasonographic measurements and blood test results of the participants will be analyzed statistically.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERobservational studyIn participants diagnosed with acromegaly, every patient to whom USG measurement methods are applied is followed by researchers before, during and after anesthesia applications, whether or not they are included in any study . Routine treatments that participants need will be fully implemented. Preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative follow-up data, which will be recorded observationally, will be used in this study.

Timeline

Start date
2025-12-25
Primary completion
2026-03-20
Completion
2026-03-20
First posted
2025-12-29
Last updated
2025-12-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07306325. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.