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High Flow Nasal Oxygen Therapy (HFNO) is a new oxygenation tool that is becoming increasingly widespread in perioperative anaesthesia. The benefits of this oxygenation tool are based on different physiological principles. These include the reduction of dead space by "flushing" the nasopharyngeal cavities, positive airway pressure and the warming and humidification of inspired air. In addition, the high flow rates used ensure that the patient's inspiratory demand is covered, allowing for the delivery of oxygen-enriched and controlled air. It is simple to use, with the only parameters to be set being gas flow and FiO2. The use of HFNO appears to allow a prolongation of apnoea time without desaturation in apneic ventilation.
Mainly studied in ENT surgery because of the interest that this oxygenation strategy presents with the absence of recourse to oro-tracheal intubation (OTI), several authors will use it in the framework of micro-laryngoscopy surgery in suspension. However, its use as an oxygenation strategy during panendoscopy has been little explored. Panendoscopy is a common procedure that requires deep and short anesthesia. The main challenge is the sharing of the airway between the anesthesia team and the surgical team. Learning to use this new method or the impact of operator experience has never been explored.
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Currently, there are several strategies to ensure oxygenation during this specific type of ENT management:
For several years, the strategy of oxygenation during panendoscopy and the number of practitioners performing this procedure has evolved in our centre.
The main objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of the evolution periods of the oxygenation strategies and the experience of the operators on the incidence of patients with at least one intra-procedural hypoxemia (SpO2 < 90% for more than one minute).
All patients who had a panendoscopy from 01 January 2015 to 31 December 2020 were analysed. The anaesthetists in our centre are divided into different practice specialties, so a small number of them regularly perform anaesthesia in ENT surgery. We divided the anaesthetists who performed panendoscopies during the study period into two categories in order to compare the incidence of severe hypoxaemia (SpO2 < 90%) among them :
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David Ferreira, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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