[
US
/ˈtɹeɪkiəɫ/
]
[ UK /tɹɐkˈiːl/ ]
[ UK /tɹɐkˈiːl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- relating to or resembling or functioning like a trachea
How To Use tracheal In A Sentence
- Aileron: the scale covering the base of primaries in some insects; see tegulae in Diptera = alula and squama, q.v. Air-sacs or vesicles: pouch-like expansions of tracheal tubes in heavy insects, capable of inflation and supposed to lessen specific gravity. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
- Blind or tactile techniques using the stylet to facilitate tracheal intubation have been previously described.
- One of the main reasons for treating patients in an intensive care unit is that they need ventilatory support, usually by sedation and endotracheal intubation.
- The major risk factor is the presence of endotracheal and/or gastric tubes within the nares.
- Pulmonary arteriole muscularization in lambs with diaphragmatic hernia after combined tracheal occlusion/glucocorticoid therapy. CHOP congenital diaphragmatic hernia publications
- It floats in circulating hemolymph that is presumably oxygenated from non-lantern tracheal sources.
- After the patient is properly sedated perform the orotracheal procedure.
- Effect of inhaled nitric oxide in premature infants on tracheal aspirate and plasma nitric oxide metabolites. Recent Neonatal Research Publications
- Endo-tracheal administration of ether is, however, far safer than peroral administration, for it overcomes the danger of respiratory arrest from pressure of the esophagoscope, foreign body, or both, on the trachea. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
- Many of the survivors would also have died if there had been no endotracheal tube.