| Literature DB >> 33194888 |
Jing Ma1,2, Chen Meng2, Zhiyu Feng3, Xiaorong Han2, Shuaishuai Liu2, Na Liu2, Weiwei Zhu1.
Abstract
Congenital deficiency of tracheal rings is a rare tracheal malformation that can cause central airway obstruction. Herein we reported the clinical data of six patients with symptomatic congenital deficient tracheal rings. There were five cases, with isolated short-segment absent cartilage ring located on the distal trachea (three cases), cervical trachea (one case), and distal trachea combined with bilateral bronchi (one case). Among them, four (4/5) received surgical tracheal resection, three fully recovered, and one died of severe infection. Besides that, one patient, who could not be weaned off the mechanical ventilation, died after rejecting surgery. One case had episodes of recurrent dyspnea and extubation failure due to long-segment tracheomalacia after repair of esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula. For this patient, deficient cartilage rings were suspected and confirmed at the age of 26 months. Moreover, the clinical characteristics of 12 cases with congenital deficient tracheal cartilage rings reported in previous literature were reviewed. The different characteristics between short- and long-segment deficient cartilage rings were discussed.Entities:
Keywords: airway obstruction; airway stent; bronchoscopy; congenital tracheal stenosis; pediatric stridor; tracheal reconstruction; tracheal rings deficiency
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194888 PMCID: PMC7606407 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2020.548089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Clinical data of six children with deficient tracheal rings.
| 1 | M | 4 months/1 year | Repeated wheezing | 1-cm segmental concentric stenosis at the distal trachea | No | Tracheal resection + tracheoplasty at the age of 1 year | Granulation and anastomotic restenosis 25 days after surgery | Laser therapy + balloon dilatation | 24 months | Survive, asymptomatic |
| 2 | F | Postnatal/8 months | Repeated stridor | 1.5-cm segmental concentric stenosis at the distal trachea | Acleistocardia | Tracheal resection + end-to-end anastomosis at the age of 9 months | Surgical sutures in the lumen | Laser therapy | 14 months | Survive, asymptomatic |
| 3 | M | Postnatal/2 months | Repeated wheezing | 1-cm segmental concentric stenosis at the cervical trachea | Acleistocardia | Tracheal resection + slide tracheoplasty at the age of 7 months | Bilateral vocal cord paralysis, anastomotic scar stenosis, a small amount of granulation hyperplasia | Laser therapy | 16 months | Survive, mild stridor |
| 4 | M | Postnatal/3 months | Dyspnea under intubation and mechanical ventilation | Stenosis in distal trachea and bilateral bronchi opening | No | Tracheal resection + carinaplasty + end-to-end anastomosis at the age of 3 months | Anastomotic infection and rupture | Reoperation | 21 days | Death |
| 5 | M | 1/2 months | Dyspnea | 1-cm segmental stenosis at the distal trachea | Acleistocardia | Mechanical ventilation, refuse surgery | – | – | 20 days | Death |
| 6 | M | Postnatal/2 months | Dyspnea and failed extubation | The severe collapse of the middle to distal trachea | Esophageal atresia, tracheoesophageal fistula, solitary kidney, acleistocardia | 7–8 × 25-mm Dumon stent placement | Stent migration after 5 months | Stent removal and replacement with 9–10 × 37-mm stent | 43 months | Survive with stent |
M, male; F, female.
Figure 1(A) Airway reconstruction shows the localized stenosis of the lumen in the cervical trachea. (B) The irregular narrow lumen of the cervical trachea shown by a CT scan. (C) Cervical stenosis was observed through the subglottic region during flexible bronchoscopy. (D) Bronchoscopy showing segmental concentric stenosis.
Figure 2(A) Bronchoscopy showing severe stenosis at the distal tracheal and juxa-tacarinal location. (B) During operation, soft stenosis without cartilage rings located in the distal trachea and bilateral main bronchi opening. (C) Bronchoscopy demonstrated that the carina and bilateral main bronchus were unobstructed after the operation. (D) Anastomotic fracture, 9 days after the operation.
Figure 3(A) Bronchoscopy showing complete collapse at the middle to distal trachea. (B) Unblocked trachea after Dumon stent was placed. (C) Malacic lumen at the distal trachea and carina. (D) Complete collapse without cartilage rings at the middle trachea was observed after stent removal. (E) The rigidity of the distal trachea had increased. (F) Unobstructed carina after stent removal.