DIRECT LARYNGOSCOPY.
By Richard H. Johnston, M. D.Read Before the Baltimore City Medical Society,Section on Medicine and Surgery,February, 1909.
By Richard H. Johnston, M. D.Read Before the Baltimore City Medical Society,Section on Medicine and Surgery,February, 1909.
By Richard H. Johnston, M. D.
Read Before the Baltimore City Medical Society,
Section on Medicine and Surgery,
February, 1909.
Direct laryngoscopy, as the name implies, is the inspection of the larynx through a hollow tube without the use of a mirror. The examination is made with the patient in the sitting position, under local anesthesia, or in the prone position, under general anesthesia. To examine the larynx in the sitting position it is practically always necessary to give a hypodermic injection of morphia and atropia a half hour beforehand, to relax the muscles and to prevent excessive secretion. The patient is seated upon a low stool with the head extended and supported by an assistant. With curved forceps 20% cocaine or 25% alypin solution is quickly passed into the throat, anesthetizing pharynx, tongue and epiglottis. Jackson's slide speculum is then introduced and the base of the tongue, with the epiglottis, gently pulled forward. At this point it is usually necessary to use more cocaine directly in the larynx, which is introduced by means of special cotton carriers. In a few minutes anesthetization is complete, and the examination can be made at leisure. It will be found easier to inspect the different parts of the larynx if the head is held about halfway between the erect position and complete extension. Insome patients with short, thick necks and large middle incisor teeth the slide will have to be removed from the speculum to enable one to see well. The examination in the prone position under general anesthesia is made with the patient's head over the end of the table supported by an assistant. The speculum is introduced and the base of the tongue and the epiglottis pulled upward forcibly. In this position direct laryngoscopy, even in children, is unsatisfactory, and operative procedures are well-nigh impossible on account of the muscular rigidity. The force required to lift the tissues is so great and the position of the arm is so cramped that it is difficult to get a clear view of the field. The difficulty has impressed all who have worked in this particular line. It remained for Dr. H. P. Mosher, of Boston, to discover a method of direct laryngoscopy which makes it as simple under ether anesthesia as in the sitting position. In April, 1908, he described in theBoston Medical and Surgical Journalthe "left lateral position" for examining the larynx and the upper end of the esophagus. He designed certain instruments which I believe are too cumbersome to meet with popular favor. In Mosher's position the patient lies on the table with the head turned toward the left until the cheek almost rests on the table; the chin is flexed on the chest. In our work at the Presbyterian Hospital we have found a modified Mosher's position and Jackson's child speculum the ideal combination for the examination in the prone patient. In children the procedure is carried out with or without anesthesia. Without anesthesia the head, hands and feet are held, the chin is flexed on the chest in a normal position by placing a pillow under the head, the speculum is introduced and the larynx inspected. In adults under anesthesia the same procedure is used, and will be found much simpler than the extended position. In adults, after the speculum is in position, if the anterior part of the larynx is not seen, gentle pressure on the thyroid cartilage will bring the anterior commissure into view. Operations can be done through the tube satisfactorily. With the different methods of direct laryngoscopy it is possible to remove any growth from the larynx.
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