Skip to content
ApexRespiratory

Reference — Neonatal & Pediatric

Pediatric Airway Equipment Sizing

A bedside sizing reference for the pediatric airway — endotracheal tube internal diameter (cuffed and uncuffed) and insertion depth, laryngoscope blade, suction catheter, and oral/nasal airway and LMA sizes — by age and weight. Every figure is a starting estimate; confirm placement clinically and with capnography.

Written by Apex Respiratory Editorial Team

Educational use only. This material supports respiratory therapy education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional protocols, or physician orders. Always follow facility policies and current provider orders, and verify calculations independently before clinical use.

Overview

Pediatric airway equipment is sized to the child. The formulas below give a starting estimate — always have one size above and one below ready, and confirm placement clinically and with capnography. A length-based resuscitation tape is the fastest reliable method in an emergency.

Endotracheal Tube Formulas

For children about 1 – 2 years and older.

Endotracheal tube sizing formulas for children
ItemFormula
Uncuffed ETT internal diameter (mm)4 + (age in years ÷ 4)
Cuffed ETT internal diameter (mm)3.5 + (age in years ÷ 4)
Insertion depth at the lip (cm)ETT internal diameter × 3 (approximately 12 + age÷2)

Neonatal ETT by Weight

Neonatal endotracheal tube size and insertion depth by weight
Weight (gestation)Uncuffed ETT ID (mm)Depth at Lip (cm)
< 1 kg (< 28 wk)2.5~6.5 – 7
1 – 2 kg (28 – 34 wk)3.0~7 – 8
2 – 3 kg (34 – 38 wk)3.0 – 3.5~8 – 9
> 3 kg (term)3.5~9 – 10

Neonatal depth “7-8-9 rule”: a 1 kg infant to ~7 cm, a 2 kg infant to ~8 cm, and a 3 kg infant to ~9 cm at the lip — equivalently, 6 + weight in kg.

Other Airway Equipment

Sizing for laryngoscope blades, suction catheters, oral and nasal airways, and laryngeal mask airways
EquipmentSizing
Laryngoscope bladeMiller 0 (preterm/neonate), Miller 1 (infant), Miller or Mac 1 – 2 (small child), Mac 2 – 3 (older child); a straight blade is preferred in infants to lift the floppy epiglottis.
Suction catheter (Fr)About 2 × the ETT internal diameter (for example, a 3.5 ETT takes about a 7 – 8 Fr catheter).
Oropharyngeal airwaySized from the corner of the mouth to the angle of the jaw; insert without rotation in infants using a tongue depressor.
Nasopharyngeal airwaySized from the nare to the tragus of the ear.
Laryngeal mask airwayBy weight: #1 under 5 kg, #1.5 for 5 – 10 kg, #2 for 10 – 20 kg, #2.5 for 20 – 30 kg, #3 for 30 – 50 kg.

Clinical Notes

  • Cuffed tubes are increasingly standard. Modern practice increasingly uses cuffed tubes even in young children (with cuff-pressure monitoring) for a better seal; the cuffed internal diameter is 0.5 mm smaller than the uncuffed estimate.
  • Finger and nostril estimates are unreliable. The old teaching that a child’s little finger or nostril predicts tube size is unreliable — use the formula or a length-based tape.
  • Always confirm placement. Confirm placement with capnography, chest rise, bilateral breath sounds, and the tube depth markings; a short trachea makes mainstem intubation easy.

Related Resources

Sources

  1. Kacmarek RM, Stoller JK, Heuer AJ. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care. 12th ed. Elsevier; 2021. Airway management and neonatal/pediatric chapters.
  2. Topjian AA, Raymond TT, Atkins D, et al. Part 4: Pediatric Basic and Advanced Life Support: 2020 American Heart Association Guidelines for CPR and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. Circulation. 2020;142(16_suppl_2):S469-S523.