| Literature DB >> 30245982 |
Pradipta-Kumar Parida1, Raja Kalaiarasi2, Arun Alexander3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Laryngotracheal trauma is a rare life-threatening emergency that requires early identification and immediate intervention. Here, we present 26 patients with laryngotracheal trauma from a tertiary hospital in India. The aim was to describe the clinical presentation and management of laryngotracheal trauma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Arytenoid cartilage; Laryngeal cartilages; Larynx; Neck injury
Year: 2018 PMID: 30245982 PMCID: PMC6147270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 2251-7251
Type of injury
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| 1 | Blunt trauma (15, 57.7%) | Road traffic accident | 12(46.2%) |
| Hanging | 3(11.5%) | ||
| 2 | Penetrating injury | Cut throat (homicidal) | 5(19.3%) |
| Cut throat (suicidal) | 4(15.4%) | ||
| Bull-gore injury | 1(3.8%) | ||
| Pen nib injury | 1(3.8%) |
Clinical presentation of the patients at the time of initial assessment
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| 1 | Respiratory distress | 18 (69.2%) |
| 2 | Surgical emphysema | 16 (61.5%) |
| 3 | Dysphonia | 8 (30.8%) |
| 4 | Bleeding from the site | 6 (23.1%) |
| 5 | Dysphagia | 4 (15.4%) |
| 6 | Hemoptysis | 4 (15.4%) |
| 7 | Aphonia | 3 (11.5%) |
| 8 | Endotracheal tube in situ | 3 (11.5%) |
Endoscopic/ direct laryngoscopic assessment findings in patients with Laryngotracheal trauma
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| 1 | Congestion and edematous vocal cord | 24 (92.3%) |
| 2 | Hematoma of the vocal cord | 14 (53.8%) |
| 3 | Restricted vocal cord mobility | 4 (15.4%) |
| 4 | Unilateral vocal cord palsy | 2 (7.7%) |
| 5 | Avulsed left cord | 1 (3.8%) |
| 6 | Hematoma of aryepiglottic fold & avulsed epiglottis | 1 (3.8%) |
| 7 | Avulsed anterior commissure | 1 (3.8%) |
Treatment outline of the patients with laryngotracheal injury
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| 1 | Conservative management | Blunt trauma | 12 (46.2%) |
| 2 | Tracheostomy and primary LT repair | Penetrating trauma | 9 (34.6%) |
| 3 | Tracheostomy followed by close observation | Blunt trauma | 2 (7.7%) |
| 4 | Neck exploration without tracheostomy | Penetrating trauma (isolated tracheal injury) | 2 (7.7%) |
| 5 | CO2 laser excision of severely avulsed cord with tracheostomy | Blunt trauma | 1 (3.8%) |
Complications following laryngotracheal trauma treatment
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| 1. | Mild dysphonia | 5(19.2%) |
| 2. | Aspiration | 3(11.5%) |
| 3. | Wound infection | 3(11.5%) |
| 4. | Granulation tissue | 1(3.8%) |
| 5. | Residual vocal cord palsy | 1(3.8%) |
| 6. | Grade 1 subglottic stenosis | 1(3.8%) |
| 7. | Poor (breathy) voice | 1(3.8%) |
Fig 1a) Patient with bullgore injury in the lateral neck. b) Intraoperative field showing avulsed epiglottis (black arrow) and opened up pharyngeal space (blue arrow).
Fig 2a) Penetrating neck injury with the plane of transection passing through thyrohyoid membrane level opening the supraglottis with tilted thyroid cartilage (black arrow). b) Open wound showing vocal cord (blue arrow) with oedematous arytenoids (white arrow).
Fig 3a) Clinical photograph of a patient with penetrating neck injury showing partial cricotracheal transection with endotracheal tube insitu. b) Surgical field showing approximated cricoid and tracheal segment with 2-0 prolene. c) Patient at 1 month follow up after discharge.d) Patient after decannulation.