On the luminous stage, singers bring to the audience an audio-visual feast with a moving voice and an emotional performance. However, when the singers suffer from thoracic and pulmonary disease requiring surgery, they often hesitate to fear that the vocal cords on which they depend for survival will be damaged during the full anesthesia of the trachea. In fact, not only professional singers, ordinary patients may also experience damage to the sound during the catheterization, removal of the acoustic cord or its ancillary structures, which further affects their daily communication.The pectroscopy is a micro-surgery, with the advantages of small trauma and quick recovery, and has become a common method of operating for a wide range of chest diseases. However, the traditional thorax surgery anaesthesia usually requires the use of a double catheter tube to intubate the trachea to meet single lung aerobic requirements during the operation. This intubation is not only complex but also prone to damage to throats, vocal cords and trachea. When intubated, the coarse double catheter inevitably squeezes and rubs tissues such as throats and acoustic cords, leading to symptoms such as post-operative pain in the throat, coughing, screeching and even irreversible acoustic damage. For singers, the damage may be more severe, as it may affect the normal functioning of the vocal cord, leading to a change in the quality of the sound, difficulties in pronunciation, etc., and preventing those who are serious from pursuing the singing business. In addition, intubation can cause acoustic edema, pneumonia and other complications, further extending recovery time and affecting singers ‘ careers. In practice, not only are the singers anxious, but a lot of vocal actors, facilitators, curators, teachers, etc. are very concerned about the protection of their vocal cords.Non-intubated anaesthesia is a viable improvement in reducing damage to the acoustic cord. Non-intubation anaesthesia is an anaesthesia technique that is carried out without the use of the traditional pneumatic intubation system, but with the retention of the patient ‘ s self-respiration through larynx or other aerobic devices, not only to protect the acoustic cord but also to speed up the patient ‘ s post-operative rehabilitation. Non-intubated anaesthesia is usually carried out in the form of anaesthesia in the IVA area (e.g. neurological or rib neurodeficiency along the thoracic vertebrate) in order to ensure good pain relief and muscle laxity while maintaining appropriate anaesthesia depth. The non-intubated anaesthesia avoids the direct injury of the intubation to the throat and the acoustic cord, significantly reducing the discomfort of the post-operative throat, minimizing the risk of harm to the acoustic cord and safeguarding the normal function of the patient ‘ s acoustic acoustic acoustic acoustic acoustic acoustic acoustic cord, as there is no need for an intubation. In addition, non-intubated anaesthesia can reduce mechanical pulmonary stress injuries, single-pulmonary aerobic complications, facilitate rapid post-operative recovery, reduce post-operative recovery time and reduce hospitalization days.The use of non-intubated anesthesia in thoracic lens surgery reflects not only advances and innovations in medical technology but also respect for the individual differences and special needs of patients. For special groups of patients, such as singers, teachers, facilitators, etc., the importance of non-intubated anaesthesia is particularly significant, providing them with a safer, more incipient, surgical anaesthesia option and a faster return to their careers. Non-intubation of anaesthesia has greatly reduced the psychological stress of this particular group of patients, who are often afraid of the traditional intubation of anaesthesia, while non-intubation of anaesthesia can reassure the patient, relax, undergo surgery in good condition, and contribute to the overall post-operative recovery.In the light of the above, the use of non-intubated anesthesia in chest lens surgery has provided protection for special groups of patients, such as singers, and ordinary patients have benefited from this method of anaesthesia. As medical technology continues to improve and innovate, it is believed that non-intubated anaesthesia will be widely applied in more surgical areas, and that it will promote micro-inflammation of anaesthesia and provide evangelization for more patients.
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