A cautionary tale…A 35-year-old woman, 154 cm, 86 kg, with placentaprevia and preeclampsia, had massive bleeding afterconsuming a lunch. She was immediately transferredto the operating room, where an anesthesiologist wascalled in. She was morbidly obese, having largebreasts and a low-pitched voice (indicative of lar-yngeal edema), and the view of the oropharynx wasobscured (Mallampati score 4). Awake trachealintubation was attempted, but the patient refused toopen her mouth. General anesthesia was induced as arapid sequence, and tracheal intubation was attemp-ted, but failed twice. A senior anesthesiologist wascalled in and accomplished intubation. Cesareansection was started. Soon after this, it was found thatthe tube was wrongly inserted into the esophagus.The tube was taken out and mask ventilation wasattempted, but this was difficult. Arterial hemoglobinoxygen saturation rapidly decreased to 70 % withcardiac arrhythmia. Nevertheless, the baby was suc-cessfully taken out and the mother started to breathe.As the operation would continue, the laryngeal maskairway was inserted. The mother vomited andaspirated.This is a fiction, but we all might have heard about a realstory like this. And, what was wrong with this case? Whycannot we clearly answer what should have been done tothis case?In this issue of the Journal, Tao et al. [1] report a ret-rospective analysis of pregnant women who underwentgeneral anesthesia during 2001–2006 in a teaching hospi-tal, to obtain the incidence of ‘difficult airway,’ which wasdefined as follows: necessity of three or more attempts atdirect laryngoscopy, the use of any maneuvers or tech-niques outside the rapid sequence induction routine(including mask ventilation resulting from oxygen desatu-ration from unsuccessful intubation attempts), the use ofadditional airway equipment, or inability to intubate thetrachea. The incidence was 0.56 % (12 of 2,158 patients).They state that tracheal intubation was possible in morethan 99.9 % of pregnant patients, and the incidence ofdifficult airway in pregnant patients is no higher than theincidence in nonpregnant patients. They attempted to seekfactors contributing to the difficult airway, and have foundthat the lack of experience of anesthesia providersincreased the incidence, whereas emergency cesareansection did not add another level of difficulty over plannedcesarean section [1].So, can we conclude that tracheal intubation in pregnantwomen is as easy as in nonpregnant patients? The reportedincidence in the general population of difficult trachealintubation is about 1 %, and that for difficult facemaskventilation is as much as 5 % [2–4]. Therefore, it seemsreasonable to conclude that the incidence in pregnantpatients may be similar to, or not much higher than, theincidence in the general population.Can we then state that the pregnant patients are not atincreased risk of serious airway complications duringanesthesia? To answer this question, we need to know therisk in the general population. Until recently, the incidence,consequences, and causes of the problems had not been that