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Related Concept Videos

Endotracheal Intubation I: Procedure01:15

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Endotracheal or ET intubation is a critical medical procedure used to secure a patient's airway, often in acute respiratory distress, apnea, upper airway obstruction, ineffective clearance of secretions, high risk for aspiration, or during general anesthesia.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 30, 2026

A Simple Method of Mouse Lung Intubation
07:06

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Published on: March 21, 2013

Tracking manikin tracheal intubation using motion analysis.

Tariq Rahman1, Swapna Chandran, David Kluger

  • 1Center for Orthopedics Research and Development, Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children and Nemours Children's Clinics, Wilmington, DE 19899, USA. trahman@nemours.org

Pediatric Emergency Care
|August 4, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Laryngoscope motion-tracking technology can distinguish expert from novice endotracheal intubation techniques in infant manikins. This technology may offer a new tool for improving intubation skills and success rates.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Simulation
  • Anesthesiology
  • Pediatric Emergency Medicine

Background:

  • Endotracheal intubation is a critical skill in emergency medicine, particularly in infants.
  • Differentiating expert from novice techniques is essential for improving patient outcomes.
  • Objective methods to assess intubation skills are needed.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate the feasibility of using laryngoscope motion-tracking technology to differentiate expert and novice endotracheal intubation techniques.
  • To identify specific motion parameters that distinguish skill levels during infant manikin intubation.

Main Methods:

  • 11 experts and 11 novices performed 10 infant manikin intubations each.
  • Electromagnetic technology tracked laryngoscope motion during key phases of intubation.
  • Success rates, motion path length, handle angle, and time in each phase were compared between groups.

Main Results:

  • Experts achieved a higher success rate (100%) compared to novices (93.5%).
  • Expert motion paths were longer in phase 2 (39 cm vs. 29 cm), and intubation time was longer (16.45s vs. 13.15s).
  • Statistically significant differences in handle angle were observed but within equipment margins.

Conclusions:

  • Laryngoscope motion-tracking is a feasible method for comparing expert and novice intubation techniques in manikins.
  • Experts demonstrated higher success rates but utilized different motion patterns and took more time.
  • Motion-tracking technology presents a potential analytical tool for enhancing intubation training and techniques.