Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes

Abstract Background Recommendations for endotracheal tube (ETT) size usually refer to the inner diameter (ID). Outer diameters (OD), however, vary greatly between manufacturers, which in some brands might cause difficulties in passing the ETT through the nostrils if choosing the nasal route for intu...

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Main Authors: Bianca Haase, Ana-Maria Badinska, Christian A. Maiwald, Christian F. Poets, Laila Springer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02889-5
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spelling doaj-b2f7467ad87a43739493036fd3947d0e2021-09-26T11:43:31ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312021-09-012111610.1186/s12887-021-02889-5Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubesBianca Haase0Ana-Maria Badinska1Christian A. Maiwald2Christian F. Poets3Laila Springer4Department of Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital of TuebingenDepartment of Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital of TuebingenDepartment of Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital of TuebingenDepartment of Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital of TuebingenDepartment of Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital of TuebingenAbstract Background Recommendations for endotracheal tube (ETT) size usually refer to the inner diameter (ID). Outer diameters (OD), however, vary greatly between manufacturers, which in some brands might cause difficulties in passing the ETT through the nostrils if choosing the nasal route for intubation. Even though the nostrils are dilatable by an ETT, it might be difficult to pass an ETT through the posterior naris (narrowest point of the nasal passage), if the OD is bigger than the nostrils. Therefore, nostril size may provide some guidance for the appropriate ETT size preventing unsuccessful intubation attempts. This study therefore compares nostril sizes of newborn infants with ODs of ETTs from several manufacturers. Methods This is a subgroup analysis of a prospective observational study, performed in a single tertiary perinatal centre in Germany. The diameter of the nostril of infants born between 34 and 41 weeks´ gestation was measured in 3D images using 3dMDvultus software and compared to the OD of ETT from five different manufacturers. Results Comparisons of nostril sizes with ODs of different ETTs were made for 99 infants with a mean (SD) birthweight of 3058g (559) [range: 1850-4100g]. Mean (SD) nostril size was 5.3mm (0.6). The OD of the 3.5mm ETT of different manufacturers ranged from 4.8-5.3mm and was thus larger than the nostril size of 20-46% of late preterm or term infants. Some OD of a 3.0mm ETT were even bigger than the OD of a 3.5mm ETT (e.g. the 3.0mm ETT from Rüsch® has an OD of 5.0mm while the 3.5mm ETT from Portex® has an OD of 4.8mm). Conclusions Clinicians should be aware of the OD of ETTs to reduce unsuccessful intubation attempts caused by ETT sizes not fitting the nasal cavity. Generated data may help to adapt recommendations in future. Trial registration Subgroup analysis of the “Fitting of Commonly Available Face Masks for Late Preterm and Term Infants (CAFF)”-study: NCT03369028, www.ClinicalTrials.gov , December 11, 2017.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02889-5Nasal intubationEndotracheal tube sizeNostril sizePretermNewborn
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bianca Haase
Ana-Maria Badinska
Christian A. Maiwald
Christian F. Poets
Laila Springer
spellingShingle Bianca Haase
Ana-Maria Badinska
Christian A. Maiwald
Christian F. Poets
Laila Springer
Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
BMC Pediatrics
Nasal intubation
Endotracheal tube size
Nostril size
Preterm
Newborn
author_facet Bianca Haase
Ana-Maria Badinska
Christian A. Maiwald
Christian F. Poets
Laila Springer
author_sort Bianca Haase
title Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
title_short Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
title_full Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
title_fullStr Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
title_sort comparison of nostril sizes of newborn infants with outer diameter of endotracheal tubes
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Recommendations for endotracheal tube (ETT) size usually refer to the inner diameter (ID). Outer diameters (OD), however, vary greatly between manufacturers, which in some brands might cause difficulties in passing the ETT through the nostrils if choosing the nasal route for intubation. Even though the nostrils are dilatable by an ETT, it might be difficult to pass an ETT through the posterior naris (narrowest point of the nasal passage), if the OD is bigger than the nostrils. Therefore, nostril size may provide some guidance for the appropriate ETT size preventing unsuccessful intubation attempts. This study therefore compares nostril sizes of newborn infants with ODs of ETTs from several manufacturers. Methods This is a subgroup analysis of a prospective observational study, performed in a single tertiary perinatal centre in Germany. The diameter of the nostril of infants born between 34 and 41 weeks´ gestation was measured in 3D images using 3dMDvultus software and compared to the OD of ETT from five different manufacturers. Results Comparisons of nostril sizes with ODs of different ETTs were made for 99 infants with a mean (SD) birthweight of 3058g (559) [range: 1850-4100g]. Mean (SD) nostril size was 5.3mm (0.6). The OD of the 3.5mm ETT of different manufacturers ranged from 4.8-5.3mm and was thus larger than the nostril size of 20-46% of late preterm or term infants. Some OD of a 3.0mm ETT were even bigger than the OD of a 3.5mm ETT (e.g. the 3.0mm ETT from Rüsch® has an OD of 5.0mm while the 3.5mm ETT from Portex® has an OD of 4.8mm). Conclusions Clinicians should be aware of the OD of ETTs to reduce unsuccessful intubation attempts caused by ETT sizes not fitting the nasal cavity. Generated data may help to adapt recommendations in future. Trial registration Subgroup analysis of the “Fitting of Commonly Available Face Masks for Late Preterm and Term Infants (CAFF)”-study: NCT03369028, www.ClinicalTrials.gov , December 11, 2017.
topic Nasal intubation
Endotracheal tube size
Nostril size
Preterm
Newborn
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02889-5
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