Editorial Type:
Article Category: Brief Report
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Jan 2019

Endotracheal Intubation Complicated by a Palatal Tooth in a Patient With Treacher Collins Syndrome

DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD, and
DDS, PhD
Page Range: 42 – 43
DOI: 10.2344/anpr-66-02-01
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We report a case of difficult endotracheal intubation in a patient with Treacher Collins syndrome. A sixteen-year-old female patient scheduled for general anesthesia had a displaced palatal tooth that interfered with laryngoscope insertion into the pharyngeal space. To address this problem, we successfully performed endotracheal intubation using a fiberscope while elevating the epiglottic vallecula using a King Vision™ video laryngoscope. A later operation was performed after tooth extraction without difficult laryngoscopy. Our experience stresses the importance of removing obstructions to laryngoscopic inspection prior to general anesthesia.

Copyright: © 2019 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
<bold>Figure 1.</bold>
Figure 1.

Lateral computed tomographic view of the patient's head showing hypoplasia of the condylar head of the temporomandibular joint and microgenia.


<bold>Figure 2.</bold>
Figure 2.

Photograph of the malpositioned palatal tooth.


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Dr Kenji Seo, Division of Dental Anesthesiology, Graduate School of Medicine and Dental Sciences, Niigata University, Niigata, Japan, 951-8514; seo@dent.niigata-u.ac.jp.
Received: 04 Dec 2018
Accepted: 16 Dec 2018
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