The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a new method for managing breathing tube pressure is better at preventing fluid from leaking into patients' lungs during surgery. It will also check if it causes fewer side effects like a sore throat. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does using a continuous pressure controller reduce fluid leakage past the breathing tube cuff compared to the standard manual method? Does the continuous pressure controller lead to fewer and less severe sore throats and voice changes after surgery? Researchers will compare two groups: Group 1: Patients whose breathing tube cuff pressure is managed with a continuous automatic controller. Group 2: Patients whose breathing tube cuff pressure is managed with the standard manual method. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to one of the two groups before their surgery. Receive a small, safe amount of blue dye in their mouth during the procedure to help measure leakage. Have two small secretion samples collected from their breathing tube during surgery. Be asked about sore throat and voice changes at 1, 2, 3, and 24 hours after the breathing tube is removed.
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Penetration of blue-dyed oropharyngeal secretions into the distal airway
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of Surgery: Tracheal aspirate samples will be collected at two defined time points: the first between 10 and 30 minutes after intubation and hemodynamic stabilization, and the second immediately prior to extubation.
Gustavo A Plotnikow, BPT; BCs ICU; PhD(c)