Study of patients who exhibit only limited morphological abnormality yet present difficulty with direct laryngoscopy is facilitated by a standard intubating position. The "Angle Finder" instrument allows implementation of a simple reproducible geometric standard which is applied easily in formal research work and in clinical practice and teaching. The proposed standard relates to the curved (Macintosh) laryngoscope blade and a supine patient. The lower neck flexion is 35° and extension of the plane of the face 15°, each angle measured relative to horizontal. Initially, the standard was derived from a review of the literature, then validated in a study of the intubating practices of 10 senior anaesthetists. A more detailed study of 10 normal volunteers confirmed reproducibility and, for nine patients with a history of difficult direct laryngoscopy, the standard was shown to be appropriate. © 1989 British Journal of Anaesthesia.
CITATION STYLE
Horton, W. A., Fahy, L., & Charters, P. (1989). Defining a standard intubating position using “angle finder.” British Journal of Anaesthesia, 62(1), 6–12. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/62.1.6
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