1.Patient outcomes after neonatal tracheotomy: A retrospective case-control study.
Jie YU ; Fengzhen ZHANG ; Fei JIN ; Jingwen WENG ; Yaguang PENG ; Jingjing ZHOU ; Yan CHEN ; Jie ZHANG ; Mingyan HEI
Chinese Medical Journal 2023;136(10):1246-1248
2.Clinical characteristics of 14 cases of neonatal tracheotomy in neonatal intensive care unit.
Jing Wen WENG ; Jie YU ; Fei JIN ; Ya Guang PENG ; Jing Jing ZHOU ; Yan CHEN ; Jie ZHANG ; Ming Yan HEI
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2022;60(8):815-819
Objective: To analyze the clinical characteristics of neonatal tracheotomy in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Methods: This single-center retrospective study included 14 neonates admitted to NICU of Beijing Children's Hospital, Capital Medical University from January 2016 to August 2021, and were<28 days of age on admission, who met the criteria of tracheotomy and finally completed the procedure. The clinical characteristics including age, weight, duration of ventilation, etiology of tracheotomy, length of hospital stay and prognosis were summarized and analyzed. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare the weight gain velocity and the duration of ventilation before and after tracheotomy. Paired t-test was used to compare the hospitalization length before and after tracheotomy. Spearman correlation was used to analyze the correlation between the clinical characteristics and outcomes. Results: For the 14 neonates, the gestational age was (38±4) weeks and birth weight was (2 824±949) g. Nine of them were male. The age on transportation was 16 (6, 25) d. A total of 10 neonates were on invasive ventilation on admission, the other 4 were on nasal continuous positive airway pressure support. Bilateral vocal cord paralysis (7 cases) was the commonest cause of tracheotomy. The age on operation was 33 (22, 44) d. There were statistically significant differences in duration of ventilation and weight gain velocity before and after operation (19.00 (10.50, 34.00) vs. 0.86 (0.06, 3.25) d, 1.66 (-0.16, 5.54) vs. 4.69 (2.30, 9.32) g/(kg·d), Z=3.01 and -1.98, both P<0.05). The total hospital stay in NICU was (37±12) d. One neonate died during hospitalization. The existence of pneumonia on admission was positively correlated to NICU stay length (r=0.57, P=0.027), the pre-operational weight gain velocity was negatively correlated to the post-operational NICU stay length (r=-0.73, P=0.020). There were 4 neonates de-cannulated during 7-38 months after the tracheotomy, and 5 neonates still wearing the tracheal cannulation during 15-66 months after the tracheotomy. Two neonates died and 2 neonates lost follow-up after discharge. All neonates could not vocalize normally before de-cannulation, and the language development obviously lagged behind the normal age group after de-cannulation. Conclusions: Bilateral vocal cord paralysis is the commonest cause of neonatal tracheotomy. The benefit of tracheotomy for NICU neonates with surgical indications is obvious, especially in facilitating extubation and improving weight gain.
Child
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Female
;
Humans
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Infant
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
;
Male
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Tracheotomy
;
Vocal Cord Paralysis
;
Weight Gain
3.Analysis of complications and outcomes of tracheotomy with different etiology in children.
Gui Xiang WANG ; Feng Zhen ZHANG ; Hua WANG ; Jing ZHAO ; Hong Bin LI ; Xiao Dan LI ; Ya Mei ZHANG ; Jie ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2021;56(4):356-362
Objective: To discuss the complications and postoperative outcomes of tracheotomy with different etiology in children. Methods: One hundred and eighty-six patients underwent tracheotomy were retrospectively analyzed from January 2016 to December 2018,including 117 males and 69 females. The children aged from 4 days to 14 years (median age 31.5months). One case was operated under local anesthesia in emergency room, 2 cases were operated under local anesthesia in pediatric intensive care unit, the rest 183 cases were operated under general anesthesia in operation room. The 186 children were divided into four groups according to their direct causes of tracheotomy. Group A(90 cases): Neuromuscular disease and severe infection,Group B(26 cases): Head and neck tumor,Group C(57 cases): Congenital malformation and upper airway obstruction,Group D(13 cases): Accidental injury. The basic information, surgical complications and postoperative outcomes were recorded and analyzed. All patients were followed up by clinic or by telephone. Spss 19.0 software was used for statistical analysis. Results: One hundred and eighty-six patients were followed up for one to four years. 33 children lost the follow-up and 46 died. Among the 186 patients, 23 cases had emergency tracheotomy (12.4%). The rate of emergency tracheotomy in group C(16 cases, 28.1%) was higher than that in the other three groups(χ2=28.08,P<0.05). The average age of patients and hospital stay in group C were significantly lower than those in the other three groups (F=33.76,P<0.05; F=14.95,P<0.05). Incision bleeding occurred in 11 cases, Subcutaneous emphysema occurred in 6 cases and accidental decannulation occurred in 10 cases (4 cases within 2 weeks and 6 after 2 weeks). Six patients underwent tracheocutaneous fistula closure operation after decannulation and the stoma healed spontaneously in other extubated children. Two patients underwent secondary tracheotomy due to accidental decannulation, and three patients underwent secondary tracheotomy for dyspnea after decannulation. In 107 cases of survival children, decannulation was successful in 65 patients and failed in 42 patients. The average duration of wearing tracheal tube was 8.8 months. The decannulation rates in the four groups were 55.6%, 45%, 69% and 77.8%, with no significant difference. Conclusions: The complications after tracheotomy in children are rare, and no severe complications occurred in long-term tracheotomy patients. The duration of wearing tracheal tube is related to the treatment of their primary disease.
Adolescent
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Anesthesia, General
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Female
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Humans
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Infant
;
Male
;
Postoperative Complications/etiology*
;
Retrospective Studies
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Tracheostomy
;
Tracheotomy/adverse effects*
6.Clinical diagnosis and treatments of type Ⅱ-Ⅳ congenital laryngotracheoesophageal cleft in 8 children.
Jing ZHAO ; Gui Xiang WANG ; Hua WANG ; Hong Bin LI ; Feng Zhen ZHANG ; Xiao Dan LI ; Jin Shi HUANG ; Jie ZHANG ; Xin NI
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2021;56(9):972-976
Objective: To investigate the clinical diagnosis and treatment of congenital laryngotracheoesophageal cleft (LTEC) in children. Methods: The clinical data of 8 children (including 7 males and 1 female)with congenital laryngotracheoesophageal cleft from January 2016 to June 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. The median diagnosing age was 3.75 months (5 days to 12 months). According to the modified Benjamin Inglis classification proposed by Sandu in 2006,there were 3 cases of type Ⅱ, 3 cases of type Ⅲa, 1 case of type Ⅲb and 1 case of type Ⅳa. All children were followed up regularly. Results: Six patients were treated for recurrent bronchopneumonia and aspiration during feeding. The patients were first treated in the pneumology departmentt or intensive care unit. Six patients combined with other malformations. Endoscopic repair operations were performed in 6 cases (3 cases of type Ⅱ, 3 cases of type Ⅲ a), 1 case of LTEC was operated through cervical approach, and 1 case of type IVa LTEC associated with VACTERL was repaired under thoracoscope combined with suspension laryngoscope. Seven patients underwent tracheotomy before or during the repair operations. Gastrostomy was performed in 2 children. The operations were successfully performed in all cases. Three children with type Ⅱ LTEC recovered well and decannulated. One case of type Ⅲa was followed up for 5 months with occasionally choking while feeding. Two cases of type Ⅲa, 1 case of type Ⅲb and 1 case of type Ⅳa died due to severe reflux, tracheomalacia or respiratory failure. Conclusions: Congenital LTEC is a rare congenital malformation which is difficult to diagnose for the poor specificity of clinical manifestations. LTEC needs to be classified by endoscopy examination under general anesthesia. Severe cases of LTEC have poorer outcomes than the mild cases, and the perioperative managements need multi-disciplinary cooperation to reduce the mortality.
Child
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Female
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Humans
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Infant
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Larynx/surgery*
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Male
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Retrospective Studies
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Trachea
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Tracheostomy
;
Tracheotomy
7.Effect of icariin on early βdefensin2 and T cell subsets in rats after tracheotomy.
Jing JU ; Renqian TAN ; Yong ZHONG ; Lingling PENG ; Yuzheng PAN
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2020;45(1):1-7
OBJECTIVES:
To investigate the effect of icariin (ICA) on early β-defensin-2 and T cell subsets in rats after tracheotomy.
METHODS:
A total of 54 SPF male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into a normal control group (group A), a model group (group B), and a model+ICA treatment group (group C), with 18 rats in each group. A tracheotomy intubation model of the B and C group was prepared. After 6 h of surgery, ICA intervention was given to group C. Groups A and B were given the same amount of normal saline. Lung tissue, alveolar lavage fluid and peripheral blood were taken at 24 h, 72 h and 168 h, respectively. The expression of rat β-defensin-2 mRNA in lung tissue was detected by RT-PCR. The content of β-defensin-2 in alveolar lavage fluid and peripheral blood serum was detected by ELISA. The content of peripheral blood T cell subsets (CD3, CD4, CD8) was detected by flow cytometry, and the ratio of CD4/CD8 was calculated.
RESULTS:
After tracheotomy, the levels of β-defensin-2 mRNA and β-defensin-2 in lung tissue from the group B were increased significantly at 24 h, then they were decreased gradually, and decreased most significantly at 168 h (<0.05). The content of β-defensin-2 in peripheral blood of group B decreased gradually, and the content of β-defensin-2 in 168 h was significantly lower than that in 24 h (<0.05), but there was no significant difference between group B and group A (>0.05). The level of CD3 T cells in peripheral blood was significantly lower than that in the group A (<0.05), but their was no significant difference in CD4 and CD8 T cells compared with group A (>0.05). After ICA intervention in group C: lung tissue, alveolar lavage fluid, peripheral blood serum β-defensin-2 content, and peripheral blood CD3 and CD4 T cell levels were gradually increased, significantly higher than those in the group B (<0.05). CD8 T cell level was significantly lower than that in the group A at 24 h (<0.05), the CD4/CD8 ratio was significantly higher at 168 h than those in the group A or B (both <0.01).
CONCLUSIONS
ICA can improve the early lung immune function in rats with tracheotomy, which might be related to up-regulation of β-defensin-2 in lung tissue and alveolar lavage fluid, concomitant with increases in CD3 and CD4 T cells and CD4/CD8 ratio in peripheral blood while reduction in CD8 cells.
Animals
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Flavonoids
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Male
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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T-Lymphocyte Subsets
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Tracheotomy
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beta-Defensins
8.Head and neck symptoms as predictors of outcome in tetanus patients
Angeli C. Carlos-Hiceta ; Ryner Jose D. Carrillo ; Jose Florencio F. Lapeñ ; a
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2020;35(2):32-36
Objective: This study aims to investigate which, if any head and neck symptoms (trismus, dysphagia, alterations in speech or facial movements, and dyspnea) might be good predictors of outcomes (mortality, tracheostomy, discharged, decannulated) and prognosis of tetanus patients.
Methods:
Design: Retrospective Cohort Study
Setting: Tertiary National University Hospital
Patients: Seventy-three (73) pediatric and adult patients diagnosed with tetanus and admitted at the emergency room of the Philippine General Hospital between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2017. Demographic characteristics, incubation periods, periods of onset, routes of entry, head and neck symptoms, stage, and outcomes were retrieved from medical records and analyzed.
Results: Of the 73 patients included, 53 (73%) were adults, while the remaining 20 (27%) were pediatric. The three most common head and neck symptoms were trismus (48; 66%), neck pain/ rigidity (35; 48%), and dysphagia to solids (31; 42%). Results of multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that only trismus (OR = 3.742, p = .015) and neck pain/ rigidity (OR = 4.135, p = .015) were significant predictors of decannulation. No dependent variable/symptoms had a significant effect in predicting discharge and mortality.
Conclusion: Clinically diagnosed tetanus can be easily recognized and immediately treated. Most of the early complaints are head and neck symptoms that can help in early diagnosis and treatment resulting in better prognosis. In particular, trismus and neck pain/rigidity may predict the outcome of decannulation after early tracheotomy, but not of discharge and mortality.
tracheotomy
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tetanus
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trismus
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Neck Pain
;
Muscle Rigidity
9.Application of Enhanced Recovery after Surgery in Interventional Treatment of Tracheal Malignant Tumor.
Hongwu WANG ; Qinghao CHENG ; Lingyu KONG ; Li SHEN
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer 2019;22(1):1-5
Currently, enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) has been widely accepted by surgery and anesthesiology all over the world, and applied in colorectal surgery, gynecology, liver surgery, breast surgery, urology and spinal surgery. But ERAS are rarely used in the field of interventional bronchoscopy. In recent years, more and more researchers have begun to explore the application of ERAS in bronchoscopic interventional therapy. This article discussed that preoperative preparation, anesthesia, intraoperative operation, postoperative observation and other aspects can influence interventional bronchoscopy.
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Anesthesia
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methods
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Bronchoscopy
;
methods
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Humans
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Length of Stay
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Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
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Perioperative Care
;
methods
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Recovery of Function
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Tracheal Neoplasms
;
physiopathology
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surgery
;
Tracheotomy
;
methods
10.Prehospital tracheotomy in a case of avulsion of the larynx with a comminuted fracture of the jawbone
Holger RUPPRECHT ; Katharina GAAB
Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine 2019;6(2):173-176
Emergency physicians in the field are sometimes confronted with cases wherein patients cannot be intubated and ventilated. In some cases, cricothyrotomy, the method of choice for securing an emergency airway, may not have a successful outcome. We report a rare case of a 35-year-old male patient with avulsion of the larynx and a comminuted fracture of the jawbone, due to entrapment in a dung excavator. Prehospital tracheotomy was successfully performed. In cases with crush injuries to the larynx, anatomic structures, including the ligamentum conicum, are destroyed. In addition, massive subcutaneous emphysema blurs the anatomical key structures; hence, only a tracheotomy can prevent a lethal outcome.
Adult
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Emergencies
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Emergency Medical Services
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Fractures, Cartilage
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Fractures, Comminuted
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Humans
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Larynx
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Male
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Methods
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Subcutaneous Emphysema
;
Tracheotomy


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