Published 20 October 2008, doi:10.1136/bmj.a1841
Cite this as: BMJ 2008;337:a1841
Research
Prophylactic administration of parenteral steroids for preventing airway complications after extubation in adults: meta-analysis of randomised placebo controlled trials
Tao Fan, medical student1,
Gang Wang, associate professor and respiratory physician1,
Bing Mao, associate professor and respiratory physician1,
Zeyu Xiong, research associate2,
Yu Zhang, critical care physician3,
Xuemei Liu, research associate4,
Lei Wang, respiratory physician1,
Sai Yang, respiratory and critical care physician5
1 Pneumology Group, Department of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China,
2 Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA,
3 Department of Intensive Care Medicine, First Peoples Hospital of Chengdu City, Chengdu 610041, China,
4 Chinese Cochrane Centre, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu,
5 Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu
Correspondence to: G Wang wcums-respiration{at}hotmail.com
Abstract
Objective To determine whether steroids are effective in preventing
laryngeal oedema after extubation and reducing the need for
subsequent reintubation in critically ill adults.
Design Meta-analysis.
Data sources PubMed, Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, Web of Science, and Embase with no limitation on language, study year, or publication status.
Selection criteria Randomised placebo controlled trials in which parenteral steroids were compared with placebo for preventing complications after extubation in adults.
Review methods Search, application of inclusion and exclusion criteria, data extraction, and assessment of methodological quality, independently performed in duplicate. Odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals, risk difference, and number needed to treat were calculated and pooled.
Main outcome measures Primary outcome: laryngeal oedema after extubation. Secondary outcome: subsequent reintubation because of laryngeal oedema.
Results Six trials (n=1923) were identified. Compared with placebo, steroids given before planned extubation decreased the odds ratio for laryngeal oedema (0.38, 95% confidence interval 0.17 to 0.85) and subsequent reintubation (0.29, 0.15 to 0.58), corresponding with a risk difference of –0.10 (–0.12 to –0.07; number needed to treat 10) and –0.02 (–0.04 to –0.01; 50), respectively. Subgroup analyses indicated that a multidose regimen of steroids had marked positive effects on the occurrence of laryngeal oedema (0.14; 0.08 to 0.23) and on the rate of subsequent reintubation (0.19; 0.07 to 0.50), with a risk difference of –0.19 (–0.24 to –0.15; 5) and –0.04 (–0.07 to –0.02; 25). In single doses there was only a trend towards benefit, with the confidence interval including 1. Side effects related to steroids were not found.
Conclusion Prophylactic administration of steroids in multidose regimens before planned extubation reduces the incidence of laryngeal oedema after extubation and the consequent reintubation rate in adults, with few adverse events.
Introduction
Critically ill patients and those undergoing surgery routinely
undergo endotracheal intubation to facilitate mechanical ventilation
in the intensive care unit and operating room.
1 As these patients
recover, respiratory support is gradually reduced until the
patient can breathe unaided and the endotracheal tube can be
removed. Although extubation is generally uneventful, in some
patients mechanical irritation by the endotracheal tube causes
substantial laryngeal oedema,
2 despite use of a high volume
and low pressure cuff
3 w3 or laryngeal ultrasound monitoring.
4 Laryngeal oedema, one of the most common complications, can
result in stridor and dyspnoea and need for reintubation.
3 Such
complications, particularly reintubation, might lead to a prolonged
stay in intensive care, additional costs, potential morbidity,
and mortality.
5 Any intervention that increases the chances
of successful extubation is therefore of great interest.
To avoid airway complications, patients are often given steroids before extubation. Prophylactic steroids substantially reduce the incidence of stridor after extubation in children and tend to decrease the rate of reintubation and stridor in neonates,6 7 8 9 but the findings might not be applicable to adults because of differences in anatomy of the upper airway and the approach to airway management. The evidence to support this approach in adults is therefore limited or controversial6 7 10 because of the limited number of randomised trials. Previous meta-analyses based on trials in adults up to 2007 yielded inconclusive or negative results and lack reliability because of small sample sizes.6 7 8 Furthermore, there have been no subgroup analyses by sex or number of doses or in high risk patients or examining the interval between administration of steroids and extubation.w4 w5
We carried out an updated meta-analysis to determine whether steroids are effective in preventing laryngeal oedema after extubation in adults and whether they reduce the need for subsequent reintubation and to examine any reported side effects.
Methods
Search strategy and selection criteria
We searched electronic databases including PubMed (1966 to June
2008), CENTRAL (Cochrane Controlled Trials Register; issue 2,
2008), Web of Science (1994 to June 2008), and Embase (1984
to June 2008), adopting the search strategy combining the terms
"(anti-inflammatory agents OR glucocorticoid* OR corticosteroid*
OR steroid* OR dexamet* OR hydrocort* OR Predniso* OR beclomet*
OR methylprednisolone) AND (intubation, intratracheal OR airway
obstruction OR laryngeal oedema OR stridor OR extubation)" with
the high sensitive searching filter provided by the Cochrane
Library.
11 We identified all clinical trials on steroids and
complications after extubation and searched reference lists
of review articles and included studies to identify other potentially
eligible studies. There was no limitation on language, year
of publication, or publication status.
Trials were included if they were randomised placebo controlled trials comparing the prophylactic administration of steroids versus placebo before planned extubation in adults, with adequately reported data on either the occurrence of laryngeal oedema after extubation or the rate of consequent reintubation. After exclusion of duplicates, TF and GW reviewed the full text of all citations with titles and abstracts that seemed to fit the criteria for inclusion. Citations that were clearly not relevant or were not randomised controlled trials were not reviewed in full. The numbers of citations rejected and the reasons for rejection were tracked.
Data extraction and quality assessment
From each article we extracted details of authors, year of publication, geographical location of the study, study population, sex, sample size, time constraints for investigation after extubation, dropouts or withdrawals, interventions, outcomes, adverse events, and intention to treat analysis.
The two reviewers independently assessed allocation concealment and likelihood of bias to determine methodological quality of the included trials. The allocation concealment was ranked as adequate, uncertain, or clearly inadequate; and the likelihood of bias was scored on a Jadad 5 point scale, which contains two questions each on randomisation and masking and one question on the reporting of dropouts and withdrawals.12 Any disagreement between reviewers was resolved by consensus.
Primary and second outcomes
In intubated patients direct laryngoscopic visualisation, the ideal method for diagnosing laryngeal oedema, requires movement of the endotracheal tube, which might be unsafe in unstable critically ill patients and thus is not routinely applied in clinical practice. After extubation, stridor or dyspnoea—an audible high pitched inspiratory wheeze caused by turbulent airflow through narrowed airways—is generally accepted as a clinical indication of laryngeal oedema.w2 We therefore defined minor laryngeal oedema as stridor and dyspnoea after extubation and major laryngeal oedema as severe respiratory distress resulting in tracheal reintubation secondary to upper airway obstruction. Our primary outcome in this meta-analysis was laryngeal oedema after extubation, with subsequent reintubation caused by laryngeal oedema as the secondary outcome.
Statistical analysis
We treated our two outcomes as dichotomous variables and reported odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals. We examined heterogeneity with the Q statistic (P<0.1, considered significant). We used a random effects model if the Q statistic was significant, otherwise we used a fixed effects model. We carried out subgroup analysis to assess the source of heterogeneity and assessed the presence of publication bias visually with a funnel plot. Differences in risk and number needed to treat were calculated to assess clinical significance. In addition, we calculated the power to confirm the reliability of the analyses.
Results
Trials included
Figure 1 shows details of study identification, inclusion, and
exclusion

. Our search strategy initially yielded 1500 citations.
Of these, we included six unique studies with 1923 participants
in this meta-analysis.
w1-w6
Tables 1 and 2 show the characteristics of the included studies.

All trials were undertaken in Europe
w1 w2 w5 and Asia
w3 w4 w6 in the past 30 years, and three
w4-w6 were published after
2000. Two trials were multicentre studies.
w2 w5 Three of them
reported negative results,
w1-w3 and the others reported positive
results.
w4-w6 Most of the included studies were of high quality
(Jadad score

3) and clearly reported allocation concealment,
except that of Gaussorgues et al (Jadad score 1), which gave
no details of randomisation, blinding, or allocation concealment.
w1 Intention to treat analysis was rarely reported.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 1 Quality assessment of included randomised placebo controlled trials on parenteral steroids for preventing complications in adults after extubation
|
|
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 2 Characteristics of included randomised placebo controlled trials on parenteral steroids for preventing complications after extubation in adults
|
|
All participants in the six trials were adults who were tracheally
intubated for at least 24 hours and were monitored for at least
24 hours after extubation. Two trials mentioned supportive treatments
for laryngeal oedema after extubation, such as non-invasive
positive pressure ventilation (bi-level positive airway pressure)
and the inhalation of racemic adrenaline (epinephrine).
w4 w6 In these studies patients were usually given intravenous steroids
sometime before selected extubation but the steroids used and
doses varied (table 2).
Outcomes for meta-analysis
Table 2 summarises individual study data for the two outcomes.
In the individual studies, most of the confidence intervals for the odds ratios for laryngeal oedema and reintubation include 1.0, whereas meta-analysis indicated that prophylactic steroids before planned extubation decreased the likelihood of laryngeal oedema after extubation (odds ratio 0.38; 95% confidence interval 0.17 to 0.85) and subsequent reintubation (0.29, 0.15 to 0.58) (figs 2 and 3)
, corresponding with a risk difference of –0.10 (–0.12 to –0.07; number needed to treat 10) and –0.02 (–0.04 to –0.01; 50), respectively. The Q test, however, showed statistical heterogeneity in the occurrence of laryngeal oedema (
2=19.48, P=0.002, I2=74.3%) but not in the rate of reintubation (
2=5.76, P=0.33, I2=13.2%). Reanalyses with a random effects model still suggested that the regimen reduced the occurrence of laryngeal oedema (0.38, 0.17 to 0.85), corresponding with a risk difference of –0.10 (–0.20 to 0.00; 10). The funnel plot showed apparent asymmetry in laryngeal oedema and reintubation.
Subgroup and sensitivity analysis
Table 3

shows the results of subgroup and sensitivity analyses.
The total incidence of laryngeal oedema after extubation and
subsequent reintubation was 9.0% and 2.1%, whereas in the subgroup
with a multidose regimen the figures were 13.7% and 3.4%. In
subgroup analyses of different regimens, multiple intravenous
steroids had a marked positive effect on the occurrence of laryngeal
oedema (odds ratio 0.14, 0.08 to 0.23) and the rate of subsequent
reintubation (0.19, 0.07 to 0.50), corresponding with a risk
difference of –0.19 (–0.24 to –0.15; number
needed to treat 5) and –0.04 (–0.07 to –0.02;
25), but there was only a trend towards benefit with single
doses (data not shown). We also carried out subgroup analyses
on the relation between dose of steroid and its effect on laryngeal
oedema after extubation and reintubation. The included trials
used various steroids—such as methylprednisolone, dexamethasone,
and hydrocortisone. Because of the different anti-inflammation
effects, we converted all doses of steroids to the equivalent
dose of methylprednisolone.
13 There was no significant difference
between doses equivalent to 20 mg (odds ratio 0.61 for laryngeal
oedema, 0.32 for reintubation) and 40 mg (0.61, 0.47) methylprednisolone,
with all confidence intervals including 1 in the single dose
regimen. In the multiple dose regimen, however, the effect of
steroids equivalent to 160 mg methylprednisolone (0.18, 0.34)
was much better than that of 100 mg (0.29, 0.49). In addition,
the effect of steroids equivalent to 80 mg methylprednisolone
(0.11, 0.07) was the best compared with the steroid doses of
100 mg and 160 mg, but this could have been because that study
did not include high risk patients and had a large sample size.
w5 Exclusion of the low quality study
w1 (Jadad score <3) and
the heaviest weight trial
w5 did not change the positive direction
of our results.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 3 Subgroup and sensitivity analysis of occurrence of laryngeal oedema after extubation and subsequent reintubation
|
|
Risk factors associated with development of laryngeal oedema
after extubation included sex (female),
w5 high acute physiological
and chronic health evaluation score,
3 low score on the Glasgow
coma scale,
w4 excessive endotracheal tube size
14 or patient
height/tube diameter,
w5 and a prolonged intubation period.
w5 Because the presence of an endotracheal tube precludes direct
visualisation of the upper airway, recognition of the oedema
caused by laryngotracheal injury is often difficult. Upper airway
patency, however, can be assessed indirectly in intubated patients
by a cuff leak test. A reduced cuff leak volume or cuff leak
volume% of tidal volume can predict the occurrence of laryngeal
oedema in patients with high risk factors. The use of a cuff
leak test before extubation has therefore been recommended as
a screening method for laryngeal oedema after extubation.
3 15 16 Patients with a cuff leak volume <110 ml or 24% of tidal
volume (a cut-off point based on the report by Miller and Cole
16)
can be regarded as at high risk. We did subgroup analysis of
high risk patients including two trials.
w4 w6 There were positive
effects on the occurrence of laryngeal oedema (0.26, 0.12 to
0.56) and on the rate of subsequent reintubation (0.31, 0.11
to 0.90). We could not carry out a subgroup analysis according
to sex as we did not have the required data.
Adverse events analysis
Three of the studies (n=969) described adverse events,w4-w6 but these could not be pooled. In the steroid group, one patient developed septic shock and died 26 hours after extubation, and one developed atelectasis 24 hours after extubation; neither event was considered to be related to the use of steroids. In the placebo group, one patient developed respiratory failure and died 23 hours and 15 minutes after extubation.
Discussion
Principal findings
Airway complications after extubation, especially reintubation
secondary to laryngeal oedema in adults, are still a problem
in intensive care.
17 In our meta-analysis, the incidence of
laryngeal oedema in the placebo group varied from 3% to 30%
and the reintubation rates from less than 1% to 5%, possibly
because of patients with different risk factors in individual
trials. The routine use of steroids in adults before planned
extubation, which has been done for decades,
18 19 is not yet
supported by clinical evidence with confidence intervals for
odds ratios including 1. By pooling data from individual studies
in a systematic review, however, we can gain more test power
and add precision to the estimates of effect. The present meta-analysis
confirms that, despite various confounding factors, intravenous
steroids do decrease the global occurrence of laryngeal oedema
after extubation by 62% and the subsequent reintubation by 71%.
Multiple dose steroids have a more marked positive effect, leading
to a reduction of laryngeal oedema after extubation by 86% and
the subsequent reintubation by 81%, but we found no significant
differences with single dose regimens. In such strategies, one
event of laryngeal oedema after extubation or subsequent reintubation
could be avoided by pretreatment with steroids for 10 or 50
patients, whereas with multidose steroids the same benefits
can be achieved in five or 25 patients. We also found a possible
dose-effect relation between steroid dose and its effect on
preventing laryngeal oedema after extubation and reintubation
in the multiple dose regimen. Although steroids have several
potential adverse events, particularly in patients already at
risk of hyperglycaemia and complications of infection, side
effects with steroid treatments over 24 hours are minimal.
20 The included studies found no side effects related to steroids,
but adverse events were not often reported.
Single v multiple dose regimens
Our results confirm the benefit of multidose steroids before planned extubation of adults. It is difficult to predict the risk of laryngeal oedema that will require reintubation. Onset of laryngeal oedema usually occurs within eight hours after extubationw1 w2 21 so administration of steroids immediately after extubation might be too late. Administration of steroids before selected extubation is assumed to protect against or treat mucosal oedema in the glottic region caused by pressure or irritation from the endotracheal tube. Roberts et al compared trials published after 2000 with older studies22 and suggested that the lack of clinical benefit observed with earlier studies might have resulted from lower total steroid doses. These authors also pointed out that older studies generally used only a single dose of steroids and suggested that this, compared with the longer duration of treatment in newer studies, might account for the different conclusions. We found possible dose dependent effects in multiple dose regimens but not in single dose regimens. In multiple dose regimens steroids are usually administered at least 12 hours before extubation and repeated almost every plasma half life. This might maintain a high level of anti-inflammatory activity during the period of vulnerability to oedema after extubation.
Strengths and limitations
As we included high quality randomised controlled trials with strong power and obtained relative narrow confidence intervals, our results are more precise than those from previous studies.22 Previous published systematic reviews focusing on the preventive and therapeutic effect of steroids in different age groups showed no clear benefit on the occurrence of airway complications in adults, but our updated results do show such a benefit.4 5 6
A recent meta-analysis10 found no clear effect of steroids on preventing laryngeal oedema after extubation and reintubation in adults. That study, however, did not include a recent trial with positive results.w6 The addition of this small trial, which was not significant in its own right, was sufficient to make the results of our updated meta-analysis significant. The authors of the previous meta-analysis also did not define reintubation as major laryngeal oedema needing tracheal reintubation secondary to upper airway obstruction. This meant that patientsw2 who needed reintubation during the follow-up period because of clinical deterioration rather than major laryngeal oedema were added to the number of reintubations, especially in the steroid group. The meta-analysis also lacked subgroup analyses of single versus multidose regimens.
Our study also has some limitations. Few of the original studies reported intention to treat analyses, and that reduces the reliability of the data included in this meta-analysis. The use of supportive treatments for laryngeal oedema after extubation in some of the included studies might have reduced the apparent benefit of steroids compared with placebo treatment. The funnel plot shows asymmetry, so we cannot eliminate the possibility of publication bias. Sex is an important risk factor for laryngeal oedema after extubation and subsequent reintubation, but we could not do a subgroup analysis because so few trials reported results separately by sex. Finally, because of heterogeneity we had to use a random effects model, which results in wider confidence intervals and thus a more conservative estimate of treatment effect.
Conclusion
Our meta-analysis of currently available evidence strongly suggests that prophylactic administration of parenteral steroids in a multidose regimen before planned extubation is effective in reducing the global incidence of laryngeal oedema and subsequent need for reintubation, with few adverse events. Further trials are needed to establish the optimal dose of steroids and the optimal time between the start of treatment and planned extubation.
What is already known on this topic
- Endotracheal intubation can result in laryngeal oedema; after the tube is removed this might lead to subsequent reintubation
- Controversy exists regarding the prophylactic administration of steroids to prevent laryngeal oedema and reintubation in adults
What this study adds
- Prophylactic administration of steroids before planned extubation reduces the incidence of laryngeal oedema after extubation and the consequent reintubation rate in adults
- Multiple dose regimens are more promising than single doses
| |
Cite this as: BMJ 2008;337:a1841
We thank Gu Jun at Technology Consulting Group of the National
Library of China for help with literature searching and Guanjian
Liu at the Chinese Cochrane Centre for his statistical assistance.
Contributors: GW was responsible for conception and design. TF, GW, and YZ searched for and retrieved articles and extracted and analysed data. TF, GW, BM, ZX, and LW were responsible for interpretation. TF and GQ wrote the manuscript, and GW and YZ revised it. GW and SY provided clinical expertise. GW is guarantor.
Funding: This work was supported by West China Hospital, Sichuan University, grant No 141070062.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: Not required.
Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
References
- Stauffer JL, Olson DE, Petty TL. Complications and consequences of endotracheal intubation and tracheotomy: a prospective study of 150 critically ill adult patients. Am J Med 1981;70:65-7.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Holst B, Berry S, Evans D, Evans R. Laryngeal oedema complicating extubation. Anaesthesia 2007;62:199-200.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Jaber S, Chanques G, Matecki S, Ramonatxo M, Vergne C, Souche B, et al. Post-extubation stridor in intensive care unit patients. Risk factors evaluation and importance of the cuff-leak test. Intensive Care Med 2003;29:69-74.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Ding LW, Wang HC, Wu HD, Chang CJ, Yang PC. Laryngeal ultrasound: a useful method in predicting post-extubation stridor: a pilot study. Eur Respir J 2006;27:384-9.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Torres A, Gatell JM, Aznar E, el-Ebiary M, Puig de la Bellacasa J, Gonzalez J, et al. Re-intubation increases the risk of nosocomial pneumonia in patients needing mechanical ventilation. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1995;152:137-41.[Abstract]
- Meade MO, Guyatt GH, Cook DJ, Sinuff T, Butler R. Trials of corticosteroids to prevent postextubation airway complications. Chest 2001;120(6 suppl):464-8S.[CrossRef]
- Markovitz BP, Randolph AG. Corticosteroids for the prevention and treatment of post-extubation stridor in neonates, children, and adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2000;(2):CD001000.
- Davis PG, Henderson-Smart DJ. Intravenous dexamethasone for extubation of newborn infants. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2001;(4):CD000308.
- Markovitz BP, Randolph AG. Corticosteroids for the prevention of reintubation and postextubation stridor in pediatric patients: a meta-analysis. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2002;3:223-6.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Markovitz BP, Randolph AG, Khemani RG. Corticosteroids for the prevention and treatment of post-extubation stridor in neonates, children, and adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2008;(2):CD001000.
- Higgins JPT, Green S, eds. Highly sensitive search strategies for identifying reports of randomized controlled trials in Medline. In: Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of interventions. 4.2.6. Chichester: John Wiley, 2006 (appendix 5b, issue 4, updated Sept 2006).
- Jadad AR, Moore RA, Carroll D, Jenkinson C, Reynolds DJ, Gavaghan DJ, et al. Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials: is blinding necessary? Control Clin Trials 1996;17:1-12.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Wang G, Wang YJ, Luo FM, Wang L, Jiang LL, Wang L, et al. Effective use of corticosteroids in treatment of plastic bronchitis with hemoptysis in Chinese adults. Acta Pharmocol Sin 2006;27:1206-12.[CrossRef]
- Suominen P, Taivainen T, Tuominen N, Voipio V, Wirtavuori K, Hiller A, et al. Optimally fitted tracheal tubes decrease the probability of postextubation adverse events in children undergoing general anesthesia. Paediatr Anaesth 2006;16:641-7.[CrossRef][Medline]
- Chung YH, Chao TY, Chiu CT, Lin MC. The cuff-leak test is a simple tool to verify severe laryngeal edema in patients undergoing long-term mechanical ventilation. Crit Care Med 2006;34:409-14.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Miller RL, Cole RP. Association between reduced cuff leak volume and postextubation stridor. Chest 1996;110:1035-40.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Epstein SK, Ciubotaru RL. Independent effects of etiology of failure and time to reintubation on outcome for patients failing extubation. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1998;158:489-93.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Epstein SK. Preventing postextubation respiratory failure. Crit Care Med 2006;34:1547-8.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Kastanos N, Estopa Miro R, Marin Perez A, Xaubet Mir A, Agusti-Vidal A. Laryngotracheal injury due to endotracheal intubation: incidence, evolution, and predisposing factors. A prospective long-term study. Crit Care Med 1983;11:362-7.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Hawkins DB, Crockett DM, Shum TK. Corticosteroids in airway management. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 1983;91:593-6.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Mackenzie CF, Shin B, McAslan TC, Blanchard CL, Cowley RA. Severe stridor after prolonged endotracheal intubation using high-volume cuffs. Anesthesiology 1979;50:235-9.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Roberts RJ, Welch SM, Devlin JW. Corticosteroids for prevention of postextubation laryngeal edema in adults. Ann Pharmacother 2008;42:686-91.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
(Accepted 7 August 2008)

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Articles
-
Steroid use is complex in intensive care
- Amit Patel
BMJ 2008 337: a2682.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Preventing postextubation airway complications in adults
- Duncan Young and Peter Watkinson
BMJ 2008 337: a1565.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Fowler, R. A., Adhikari, N. K. J., Scales, D. C., Lee, W. L., Rubenfeld, G. D.
(2009). Update in Critical Care 2008. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
179: 743-758
[Full text]
-
Patel, A.
(2008). Steroid use is complex in intensive care. BMJ
337: a2682-a2682
[Full text]
-
Young, D., Watkinson, P.
(2008). Preventing postextubation airway complications in adults. BMJ
337: a1565-a1565
[Full text]
Rapid Responses:
Read all Rapid Responses
- Ubiquitous steroid use in the intensive care unit
- Amit Patel
bmj.com, 22 Oct 2008
[Full text]
- Prophylactic steroids to prevent ‘extubation failure’ in ventilated children
- Joseph L Mathew, et al.
bmj.com, 26 Oct 2008
[Full text]
- Corticosteroids pharmacodynamics explains late effects and may be critical to optimize therapeutic outcomes.
- Fernando Martins do Vale
bmj.com, 10 Nov 2008
[Full text]
- Major post extubation stridor in ICU is not common
- Cecily M D Don, et al.
bmj.com, 17 Nov 2008
[Full text]
- Post extubation laryngeal oedema in anesthesia for surgical adult patients
- Mohamad Said Maani Takrouri, et al.
bmj.com, 4 Jan 2009
[Full text]
- Post extubation laryngeal oedema in anesthesia for surgical adult patients
- Mohamad Said Maani Takrouri, et al.
bmj.com, 5 Jan 2009
[Full text]
- It’s the 30th birthday of ‘Evidence Based Medicine’ and time to meet Cochrane’s Challenge.
- Tony K Chow, et al.
bmj.com, 21 Jan 2009
[Full text]