Laryngoscopy and Endotracheal Intubation
Laryngoscopy is the technique of exposing the laryngeal inlet so that a tracheal tube can be passed under vision, and endotracheal intubation is the placement of a cuffed tube into the trachea to secure and isolate the airway. Together they are the reference method for definitive airway control during general anaesthesia.
Definition
Endotracheal intubation is the insertion of a cuffed tube through the larynx into the trachea, usually under laryngoscopic vision, to maintain a patent airway and permit controlled ventilation.
Scope
This topic covers direct and video laryngoscopy, the grading of the laryngoscopic view, the steps and confirmation of tracheal intubation, and the comparative role of videolaryngoscopy. It is a reference description of the techniques and their evidence base, not a procedural manual or device-selection instruction.
Core questions
- How does laryngoscopy expose the larynx for tube placement?
- How is the laryngoscopic view graded and related to difficulty?
- How does videolaryngoscopy compare with direct laryngoscopy?
Key concepts
- Direct laryngoscopy
- Videolaryngoscopy
- Cormack-Lehane grade
- Cuffed tracheal tube
- Confirmation by capnography
- Axis alignment and sniffing position
- First-pass success
Mechanisms
During direct laryngoscopy the operator uses a laryngoscope blade to displace the tongue and align the oral, pharyngeal, and laryngeal axes so the glottis can be seen and a tube advanced between the vocal cords. The resulting view is described by the Cormack-Lehane grade, which links visualisation to anticipated difficulty (Cormack-Lehane, 1984). Videolaryngoscopy uses a camera at the blade tip to provide an indirect view that does not require the same line-of-sight axis alignment, often improving glottic visualisation. Correct tracheal placement is confirmed objectively, principally by sustained end-tidal carbon dioxide (Apfelbaum, 2022).
Clinical relevance
Tracheal intubation provides a secured, isolated airway and is central to general anaesthesia for many procedures; technique choice and confirmation of placement are addressed in difficult-airway guidance (Apfelbaum, 2022; Frerk, 2015). This entry is descriptive and not individualised clinical advice.
Epidemiology
A Cochrane systematic review found that videolaryngoscopy, compared with direct laryngoscopy in adults, is associated with improved glottic view and reductions in failed and difficult intubations (Hansel, 2022).
Evidence & guidelines
The Difficult Airway Society and ASA guidelines structure intubation around planned attempts, limiting repeated traumatic tries and confirming placement; systematic-review evidence supports a beneficial role for videolaryngoscopy in many settings (Frerk, 2015; Apfelbaum, 2022; Hansel, 2022).
History
Laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation were established through the twentieth century as anaesthesia matured; the Cormack-Lehane grading of the laryngeal view (1984) standardised description of difficulty, and the later introduction of videolaryngoscopy expanded the available techniques (Cormack-Lehane, 1984; Hansel, 2022).
Debates
- Should videolaryngoscopy replace direct laryngoscopy as the default?
- Systematic-review evidence shows videolaryngoscopy improves the view and reduces failed intubation, but questions of routine use, training, cost, and the best device remain under discussion.
Related topics
Seminal works
- cormack-lehane-1984
- frerk-2015
- hansel-2022
Frequently asked questions
- How is correct tracheal tube placement confirmed?
- Sustained end-tidal carbon dioxide on capnography is the principal objective confirmation that a tube is in the trachea, alongside clinical signs; this is emphasised in difficult-airway guidance (Apfelbaum, 2022).
- Does videolaryngoscopy improve intubation outcomes?
- A Cochrane systematic review reports that videolaryngoscopy improves glottic visualisation and reduces failed and difficult intubations in adults compared with direct laryngoscopy (Hansel, 2022).