The relationship between tracheal width and left bronchial width: Implications for left-sided double-lumen tube selection JOURNAL OF CARDIOTHORACIC AND VASCULAR ANESTHESIA Brodsky, J. B., Malott, K., Angst, M., Fitzmaurice, B. G., Kee, S. P., Logan, L. 2001; 15 (2): 216-217

Abstract

To determine if there is a relationship between tracheal width (TW) and left bronchial width (LBW).Three-dimensional chest computed tomography (CT) scans were used to reconstruct major airways for measurement of TW and LBW.Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California.Thirty-one adult patients undergoing chest CT scans.Cursors were used to directly measure internal diameter from coronal images of the trachea at midclavicular level and the left main bronchus at a level 1 cm below the carina.TW and LBW, but not the LBW-to-TW ratio, were significantly larger in men than in women. The LBW-to-TW ratio was consistent for men (0.75 +/- 0.09) and women (0.77 +/- 0.10).LBW is proportional to TW. If LBW cannot be measured directly but TW can, the ratio of LBW to TW can be used to predict LBW. An appropriate-sized left double-lumen tube can then be selected for the patient.

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