Excellent points and issues that certainly had my undivided attention. 👍
These circumstances can be difficult and you have to take the entire picture into account.
Risks vs benefits:
LMA:
The patient is cachectic, without an appetite, on reglan 15 mg tid. Room time was 14:00. That is 17 hours since he last nibbled at his food the night before. Duration of surgery/anesthesia was 1 hr. If the case went longer than perhaps an ETT would have been better. Not an abdominal procedure. V/Q relationship favors LMA over ETT in a patient that has minimal reserve. More stable hemodynamics placing LMA vs ETT. We all have tricks to blunt the hemodynamic response to intubation but I would bet most agree that, overall, LMA has less variability in B.P. swings than ETT. The man has a known 7cm AAA and has a bad heart. The flip side is aspiration and possible deterioration of pulm fxn.
VS.
ETT:
ETT to the SICU. Vent + narcs/benzos. May stay intubated for days, possibly weeks. TPN/enteral nutrition. Trach? Higher chances of hospital aquired PNA in an already immunocompromised patient. PPV and it's affects. 7cm AAA carries a 20-50% annual rupture rate and a 75% 5 year rupture rate. I wonder what the rate is when you are awake, intubated and in the ICU getting ready for extubation? The flip side is a "protected airway" for one hour. Keep in mind, ETT by itself is emetogenic.
My patient wanted this procedure because he wanted quality of life in his final days. I tried to do what is best for him keeping in mind his wishes.
In my assessment of the entire picture, I felt as if an LMA could be just as safe, if not safer than ETT.
Some would send him to the ICU with ETT and move on to the next case. Maybe that was the right thing to do. If we had proseals it would be a no brainer. Place and suck out the stomach. Done deal.
If I lived in Pennsylvania or Florida, things may have been different. It is unfortunate that medical legal issues sometimes dictates how you practice.
You could argue either way and I will admitt, type I DM, hiatal hernia and gastroperesis are code words for ETT. But, not everything in medicine is black and white. I don't think this patient fits that rule IMHO.