Laryngoscope

1. Basic Components

A. Handle

  • Contains batteries 
  • Provides power to light source
  • Sizes:
    • Adult (standard)
    • Pediatric (short handle for difficult airway,Polio handle)

B. Blade

  • Attaches to handle
  • Contains light source (bulb/fiberoptic/LED)
  • Used to displace tongue and soft tissues

C. Light Source

  • Types:
    • Conventional bulb
    • Fiberoptic bundle
    • LED (modern standard brighter, durable)

2. Types of Laryngoscopes

A. Direct Laryngoscopes

(1) Macintosh Blade (Curved)

Mechanism:

  • Tip placed in vallecula
  • Lifts epiglottis indirectly

Features:

  • Most commonly used in adults
  • Less trauma to epiglottis
  • Requires alignment of:
    • Oral
    • Pharyngeal
    • Laryngeal axes

Sizes:

  • 3 Adult female
  • 4 Adult male

(2) Miller Blade (Straight)

Mechanism:

  • Directly lifts epiglottis

Features:

  • Preferred in:
    • Infants & pediatrics
    • Floppy epiglottis
  • Better glottic exposure in some difficult airways

B. Video Laryngoscopes (VL)

Examples:

  • GlideScope
  • C-MAC
  • McGrath MAC

Mechanism:

  • Camera at blade tip indirect visualization

Advantages:

  • No need for axis alignment
  • Better Cormack-Lehane grade
  • Higher success in difficult airway
  • Teaching tool (shared screen)

Disadvantages:

  • Expensive
  • Fogging, secretions affect view
  • Requires learning curve


C. Specialized Laryngoscopes

(1) McCoy Blade

  • Hinged tip lifts epiglottis
  • Useful in difficult airway

(2) Optical Laryngoscopes

  • e.g., Airtraq
  • Uses optical channel for indirect view

(3) Rigid Fiberoptic Laryngoscope

  • Hybrid between direct and fiberoptic

3. Blade Sizes 

Blade

Size

Use

Miller

0

Preterm

Miller

1

Neonate

Miller

2

Infant

Macintosh

2

Child

Macintosh

3

Adult female

Macintosh

4

Adult male

4. Laryngoscopy Technique 

Positioning

  • Sniffing position(Neck flexion + head extension)
    • Neck flexion(Head elevation with pillow (≈ 7–10 cm)) aligns pharyngeal + laryngeal axes
    • Head extension aligns oral + pharyngeal axes

Component

Joint

Angle

Neck flexion

Lower cervical spine (C5–C7)

~35°

Head extension

Atlanto-occipital (C0–C1)

15–25°

  • In obese ramped position

Steps

  1. Open mouth (scissor technique)
  2. Insert blade from right side
  3. Sweep tongue to left
  4. Advance blade:
    • Macintosh vallecula
    • Miller lift epiglottis
  1. Lift upward and forward (NOT levering on teeth)

5. Cormack-Lehane Grading

Grade

View

I

Full glottis

II

Partial glottis

III

Epiglottis only

IV

No glottis/epiglottis

VL improves grade significantly 


6. Complications

Mechanical

  • Dental trauma (most common)
  • Soft tissue injury
  • Esophageal intubation


Physiological

  • Tachycardia, hypertension (sympathetic response)
  • Raised ICP
  • Hypoxia
  • Arrhythmias

7. Direct vs Video Laryngoscopy 

Feature

Direct

Video

View

Line-of-sight

Indirect

Axis alignment

Required

Not required

Difficult airway

Limited

Superior

Cost

Low

High

Learning

Easier initially

Needs training


8. Recent Guidelines & Evidence 

  • Video laryngoscopy preferred in ICU intubations
  • Reduces:
    • Failed first attempt
    • Esophageal intubation
  • Improves safety in:
    • Hypoxemic patients
    • Difficult airway

Supported by:

  • ICU airway guidelines (e.g., Difficult Airway Society, SCCM-based practices)
  • Increasing shift toward VL-first approach