Abstract

Supplemental oxygen is routinely administered topatients prior to and during induction of general anesthesia and sedation. This increases the fraction of oxygen in the lungs,increases oxygen delivery, and increases the time to oxygen desaturation. Proprietary Transnasal Humidified Rapid-Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange (THRIVE) systems, whichdeliver warmed and humidified oxygen, have been extensivelyresearched in the perioperative and critical care setting and have beenshown to significantly prolong time to desaturation and as a means of ventilatory support. The use of traditionalnasal oxygen cannula used at maximum flow ratesis currently used in short bursts as it is poorly tolerated. There is however a dearth of data examining the use of this technique. We hypothesized that traditionalnasal oxygen cannulae used at maximum flow rates can deliver oxygen aseffectively as THRIVE in this setting. We designed a crossover volunteer feasibility study. The participants were 10 healthy anesthetists. We compared the two methods of oxygen delivery by measuring transcutaneous oxygen measurement andpharyngeal oxygen concentration. Comfort and noise levels were recorded. The aforementioned parameters werecompared between the two groups. We observed that a standard oxygencannula used athigh flows delivers comparable oxygen delivery and tissue oxygenationperformanceto proprietary THRIVE systems. However, they are lesscomfortable andmake more noise. To the authors' knowledge this study is the first to study the oxygen delivery of traditionalnasal oxygen cannula used at maximum flow rates and make comparisons to the well-studied THRIVE technique. While similar transcutaneous partial pressure of oxygen and pharyngeal gas concentrations were observed with both techniques, the standard cannulae were deemed to be a lot less comfortable than THRIVE and made a lot more noise which likely limit the utility of this technique outside of short bursts. In this study, a standard nasal oxygen cannula used at highflows achieved similar oxygen delivery to THRIVE at the expense of poorcomfort and increased noise.

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