Floppy Uvula after GETA

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.
Status
Not open for further replies.

masterPain

Full Member
Joined
Jan 26, 2024
Messages
1,523
Reaction score
1,044
Hey all,

Lowly pain doctor who had surgery yesterday, had the usual sore throat after intubation. I had this weird lump in my soft palate upon swallowing and my uvula looks elongated and floppy. Doesn’t appear to be necrosed.

In all my years of practicing anesthesia I never had this happen to one of my patients. (To my knowledge at least)

I’m assuming this is self limited and will get better in time?
 
Hey all,

Lowly pain doctor who had surgery yesterday, had the usual sore throat after intubation. I had this weird lump in my soft palate upon swallowing and my uvula looks elongated and floppy. Doesn’t appear to be necrosed.

In all my years of practicing anesthesia I never had this happen to one of my patients. (To my knowledge at least)

I’m assuming this is self limited and will get better in time?
Yes
 
Hey all,

Lowly pain doctor who had surgery yesterday, had the usual sore throat after intubation. I had this weird lump in my soft palate upon swallowing and my uvula looks elongated and floppy. Doesn’t appear to be necrosed.

In all my years of practicing anesthesia I never had this happen to one of my patients. (To my knowledge at least)

I’m assuming this is self limited and will get better in time?
sounds like a bad lma placement
 
No LMA, ET tube
Seen it with EGDs before.

Sometimes lma can kink the uvula

If ett, may have been bent in a way that inadvertently out pressure on it. Very rare but also hard to avoid specifically as you can't really complo control what the ett tube does
 
Very common, often it’s from suctioning prior to removing the ETT. If the yankauer gets right on the uvula it’ll give it a big tug, and a lot of people do it repeatedly.
 
I've seen a lot of damage done by aggressive suctioning. I'd suspect it's the culprit.
 
Very common, often it’s from suctioning prior to removing the ETT. If the yankauer gets right on the uvula it’ll give it a big tug, and a lot of people do it repeatedly.
Self limiting I suppose?
 
Strictly speaking, even though you're a doctor and a regular SDN member, this thread falls in the basket of seeking medical advice, which SDN doesn't permit.

Standard disclaimer - if you have questions or concern about your health or care, discuss them with your doctor. 🙂

Closing thread.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top