Abstract

Patients who undergo oral or oropharyngeal surgery usually require a tracheostomy for postoperative airway maintenance. However, the development in recent years of soft endotracheal tubes now provides the alternative of short-term endotracheal intubation, with minimal sequelae. Our favorable experience with the use of short-term intubation in children with epiglottitis prompted us to apply the technique to adults. Over a 2-year period at the University of Chicago Medical Center, we successfully used postoperative endotracheal intubation for 19 adult and pediatric patients who underwent major intraoral procedures, thus avoiding the possible complications, discomfort, and anxiety associated with tracheostomy. The patients were given intravenous steroids and antibiotics concomitantly, so that tissue edema and inflammation were minimized. No complications related to intubation and no postextubation airway compromise were noted in any of the patients.

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