An endotracheal tube (ETT) is used in anaesthesia, intensive care and emergency medicine for airway management and mechanical ventilation. It is regarded as the most reliable available method for protecting a patient's airway.
Intubation usually requires general anesthesia and muscle relaxation but can be achieved in the awake patient with local anaesthesia or in an emergency without any anaesthesia, although this is extremely uncomfortable and generally avoided in other circumstances.
It is usually performed by visualising the larynx by means of a hand-held laryngoscope but can also be performed "blind". A stylet is normally used in an intubation which is a bendable piece of metal inserted into the ETT as to make the tube more stiff for easier insertion, this is then removed after the intubation and a ventilator or bag valve mask is attached to the ETT. The goal is to position the end of the ETT 2 centimeters above the bifurcation of the lungs or the carina. If inserted too far into the trachea it mainly goes into the right mainstem of the bronchial tree.
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