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Department of Anesthesiology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, dzvara{at}wfubmc.edu
To the Editor:
Patient positioning in the obese patient is of critical importance when performing laryngoscopy. Brodsky et al. (1) report a series of 100 patients in which 99 were successfully tracheally intubated using an elevated head-up position (Fig. 1) (2). In this position, the shoulders are elevated with several pads, the head and neck are extended, and the external auditory meatus is in line with the sternal notch. We propose a modification of this position that achieves the same goals without application of the rolls under the patient's shoulders (Fig. 2). This modified position is commonly used in our hospital. Our positioning technique achieves the same relative patient orientation without the burden of placing the extra pads under the shoulders. This positioning is effective and saves the health care provider from the additional strain of moving the weight of these large patients.
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References
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