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Pulmonary aspiration under GA : a 13‐year audit in a tertiary pediatric unit
Author(s) -
Tan Zihui,
Lee Shu Ying
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1111/pan.12877
Subject(s) - medicine , pulmonary aspiration , incidence (geometry) , perioperative , intensive care unit , airway , rapid sequence induction , population , surgery , pediatric intensive care unit , pediatrics , emergency medicine , anesthesia , intubation , intensive care medicine , physics , environmental health , optics
Summary Introduction Pulmonary aspiration is a known risk of general anesthesia. We aim to find out the incidence, risk factors, and outcome of pulmonary aspiration in our pediatric population. Methods Since 2000, all critical incidents are reported on a standardized audit form. All cases with pulmonary aspiration being reported as a critical incident were identified and their case notes traced to look at the perioperative details. Results From 2000 to 2013, a total of 102 425 pediatric cases were done in our hospital. Twenty‐two cases were reported to have aspirated during anesthesia giving an incidence of 0.02% (1 in 4655). Majority (59.0%) of the children were between the ages of 3–12 and of ASA 1 (54.5%). None of them had any history of pulmonary aspiration. Of the 22 cases, 12 occurred during induction, three during maintenance, three during emergence, three during recovery, and one occurred preinduction. Twelve cases had intravenous induction while the rest received inhalational induction. The type of induction does not appear to affect the incidence of aspiration ( OR 1.139 95% CI : 0.457–2.818 P = 0.76). Two cases were found to have a difficult airway during induction and 45.5% were emergency operations. Emergency surgeries put the patient at a higher risk of aspiration ( OR 4.321 95% CI : 1.735–10.687 P = 0.001). No mortality was reported. Surgery was canceled for one patient, two had unplanned admissions, seven were admitted to high dependency unit or intensive care unit with two requiring postoperative ventilation. Conclusion The incidence of aspiration under general anesthesia in our hospital is comparable to published reports. Our audit highlights the fact that pulmonary aspiration although rare mostly occur in healthy ASA 1 and 2 children with no prior history. Emergency surgeries put the patient at a higher risk of aspiration. They occurred usually during induction, a process which tends to be variable (in technique and duration) for pediatric patients.

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