| Literature DB >> 27730324 |
Savinda Liyanagedera1, Robert McLeod1, Hassan A Elhassan2.
Abstract
Exercise induced laryngeal obstruction (EILO) is a condition where inappropriate vocal cord or glottic closure occurs during exercise. This review of the literature provides an overview of the current understanding of the definition, epidemiology, diagnosis and management of EILO. Using The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines the Cochrane, Embase, Ovid MEDLINE and PubMed databases were searched. Four search domains "exercise", "induced", "laryngeal" and "obstruction" were used. Primary searching found 469 records, 308 were excluded following screening of titles and citation. 100 were duplicates, a further 47 studies were excluded after applying inclusion and exclusion criteria. Two studies were identified following cross-referencing. A total of 15 studies were included. The last search date was 6/06/15. Average prevalence in the general adolescent population and athletes was 7.1 and 35.2 %, respectively. Dyspnoea was reported in 96.5, 99 and 100 % of three EILO patient cohorts. Two studies (n = 107) reported continuous laryngoscopy during exercise (CLE) testing could differentiate between patients and controls. In two studies (n = 33) the visual analogue scale (VAS) showed a beneficial effect of endoscopic supraglottoplasty (ES). Thirty-eight out of 43 patients who received two or more laryngeal control therapy sessions (LCT) had improvement or resolution of EILO symptoms. Exercise induced dyspnoea is the most common EILO symptom. EILO has a high occurrence in adolescents and athletes. The CLE test is the current gold standard for EILO diagnostics. Management of EILO includes both surgical and non-surgical interventions.Entities:
Keywords: CLE-test sums score; Continuous laryngoscopy exercise test (CLE); Endoscopy supraglottoplasty (ES); Exercise induced laryngeal obstruction (EILO); Laryngeal control therapy (LCT)
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27730324 PMCID: PMC5340851 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-016-4338-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Fig. 1Search strategy to obtain literature is presented. Articles on EILO were included. Exclusion criteria include reviews, thesis, case reports, opinion-based reports, letters, web pages, congress abstracts, Small studies (<5 participants), animal studies and cadaver studies
Prevalence of EILO
| Study | No. of subjects | Age group of cohort | Prevalence of EILO/EIVCD/EIPVFM (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christensen et al. [ | 556 | 14–24 | 42 (7.5) |
| Nielsen et al. [ | 88 | Median age of 17 | 31 (35.2) |
| Johansson et al. [ | 146 | 12–13 | 8 (5.5) |
| Total | 790 | – | 81 (10.25) |
EILO exercise induced laryngeal obstruction, EIVCD exercise induced vocal cord dysfunction, EIPVFM exercise induced paradoxical vocal fold motion
Symptoms/features of EILO
| Study | Number | % Dyspnoea during exercise | % Hoarse voice/stridor during exercise | % Cough during exercise | % Dysphagia during exercise | % Open glottic configuration during exercise |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiang et al. [ | 104 | 99 | 43 | 38 | 22 | – |
| Olin et al. [ | 23 | 100 | 56.5 | – | – | 78.3 |
| Tilles et al. [ | 143 | 96.5 | 50 | 9.8 | – | – |
| Røksund et al. [ | 113 | – | 68 | – | – | – |
| Overall | 383 | 98 | 54 | 22 | 22 | 78.3 |
EILO exercise induced laryngeal obstruction
CLE testing
| Study | Number of patients | Number of controls | Diagnostic method | Aims | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tervonen et al. [ | 30 (successfully carried out the test 27) | 15 | Fiberoptic videolaryngoscopy during bicycle ergometry | Develop and validate a new diagnostic method for EIVCD by combination of continuous fiberoptic laryngoscopy and bicycle ergometry test | Thirty consecutive patients referred to a laryngologist due to EIVCD suspicion and 15 healthy controls underwent CLE testing using fiberoptic videolaryngoscopy during bicycle ergometry |
| Maat et al. [ | 80 | 20 | CLE | Develop and validate a scoring system for laryngeal obstruction as visualized during the CLE-test | 80 patients and 20 symptom-negative volunteers performed a CLE test. Every participant scored symptom severity during exercise. The scoring system has four sub-scores, each graded from 0 to 3. Two independent laryngologists, blinded to clinical data, did scoring of the video recordings of the larynx twice. Assessment of the inter- and intra-observer agreement proportions for each sub-score through these four sessions was done |
| Christensen et al. [ | 97 | – | EILOMEA | EILOMEA is diagnostic software used to objectively describe images gained by CLE test. Evaluation of this software was performed to evaluate the reproducibility and clinical applications of this tool for the diagnosis of EIL and EIVCD | Nighty seven subjects aged between 14 and 24 had CLE testing performed. An expert assessed the severity of EIL and/or EIVCD for each laryngoscopic recording and compared this with data from EILOMEA |
| Chiang et al. [ | 93 | – | FFL | Single institution retrospective review and cohort analysis was performed to review the diagnostics and treatment of EPVFM | Single-institution retrospective review identifying patients with EPVFM was done. FFL performed on these patients were reviewed with regarding the presence of laryngeal pathology and the presence of PVFMD at rest and/or with exertion. Symptom outcomes were graded as complete resolution, improvement, or unchanged following therapy |
| Roksund et al. [ | 151 | 20 | CLE | Aimed to study transnasal laryngoscopic evaluation of laryngeal function during treadmill exercise |
CLE continuous laryngoscopy during exercise, FFL flexible fiberoptic laryngoscopy, EIL exercise induced laryngomalacia, EIVCD exercise induced vocal cord dysfunction, EPVFM exercise induced paradoxical vocal fold movement, PVFMD paradoxical vocal fold motion disorder
Other diagnostic methods compared to CLE
| Study | Number of patients | Number of controls | Diagnostic methods | Aims | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christensen and Rasmussen [ | 39 | – | EVH compared to CLE | To assess if a EVH test can produce laryngeal obstructions laryngoscopically identical in subtypes and development as seen through an exercise test | EVH and CLE testing was done during the screening of two national athletic teams( |
| Christensen et al. [ | 100 | – | FVL compared to CLE | To compare physician assessed pre- and post-exercise flow-volume loops and flow data with laryngoscopic findings during exercise | Data from 100 consecutive CLE-tests were analysed. Laryngoscopic images were compared with the corresponding pre- and post-exercise flow-volume loops assessed by four separate physicians |
| Olin et al. [ | 23 | – | FVL | The objective of this study was to highlight a group of patients who demonstrated important clinical findings of EIPVFM (exertional dyspnea with audible stridor) without simultaneously definitive physiologic findings (mild glottic adduction and normal flow volume loops) | We reviewed the records of 23 patients who performed continuous laryngoscopy during exercise. 3 blinded physicians independently evaluated isolated audio tracks, video tracks, and flow volume loops of the patients for stridor, glottic configuration, and the presence of inspiratory limitation on exercise flow volume loops at peak work capacity |
EVH eucapnic voluntary hyperventilation, FVL flow volume loops, EIPVFM exercise induced paradoxical vocal fold movement, EILO exercise induced laryngeal obstruction, CLE continuous laryngoscopy during exercise
Treatment of EILO
| Study | Number of patients | Number of controls | Treatment method | Aims | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maat et al. [ | 10 | – | ES with laser incision in both aryepiglottic folds anterior to the cuneiform cartilages and removal of the mucosa around the upper parts of the tubercles | Evaluate the usefulness of the CLE-test as a method for selecting patients for surgical intervention and evaluating treatment effects postoperatively | Ten patients underwent ES. CLE- test was done on each patient before and 3 months after surgery |
| Chiang et al. [ | 96 | – | LCT | The aim was to see of LCT was an effective treatment for EPVFMD | Patients diagnosed with PVFMD via FFL as well as symptoms with exercise were selected. Therapy was reviewed and symptoms outcomes were graded as complete resolution, improvement or unchanged following therapy |
| Maat et al. [ | 23 surgically treated patients with (ST) | 71 conservatively treated patients with breathing exercise (CT) | Laser supraglottoplasty | Reveal the natural history of supraglottic EILO and compare the symptoms, and the function of the larynx in conservatively versus surgically treated patients | Follow-up study of supraglottic EILO was performed. In 94 patients with predominantly supraglottic obstruction a questionnaire-based survey was conducted 2–5 years after EILO diagnosis via CLE test. Seventy-one patients had CT and 23 had ST. A second CLE test was carried out in 14 CT and 19 ST patients |
ES endoscopic supraglottoplasty, LCT laryngeal control therapy, ST standard therapy, CT control therapy, EILO exercise induced laryngeal obstruction, FFL flexible fiberoptic laryngoscopy, EPVFMD exercise induced paradoxical vocal fold motion disorder, CLE-test continuous laryngoscopy during exercise test
Fig. 2Algorithm for the diagnosis and treatment of EILO