| Literature DB >> 34295388 |
Delphine Natali1, Hoan Le2, Cuong Nguyen Ngoc3, Minh Tran Ngoc4, Chi Tran Khanh5, Philippe Hovette6.
Abstract
Stridor is a sign of vital emergency that immediately orientates towards a laryngeal or tracheal obstruction. This case report focuses on the management of stridor, which comprises emergency securing of airways and parallel aetiological investigations. https://bit.ly/39CTjOg.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34295388 PMCID: PMC8291950 DOI: 10.1183/20734735.0201-2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breathe (Sheff) ISSN: 1810-6838
Figure 1Algorithm for management of stridor at the emergency department.
Causes of stridor with their main diagnosis and therapeutic specificities
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| Children <3 year-old | Sudden non-febrile stridor | Heimlich manoeuvre | Chest radiograph, CT scan of thorax |
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| Allergies | Sudden non-febrile stridor | Parenteral adrenaline injection | ±Intubation |
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| Vocal cords oedema | Stridor immediately after extubation | Nebulisation of adrenaline and steroids | ||
| Laryngeal injury | Prolonged intubation | Stridor immediately after extubation | Direct laryngoscopy | Various therapeutic options |
| Tracheal stenosis | High endotracheal tube balloon pressure | Progressive stridor and dyspnoea after extubation | Bronchoscopy | CT scan of thorax |
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| Think particularly to life-threatening injury in case of stridor after direct impact on the glottis or trachea | Intubation | Most often surgical treatment | |
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| Epiglottis | Children with immune deficiency | Rapid respiratory febrile stridor and respiratory distress | Do not lie down | Neck soft tissue x-ray: thumb sign |
| Croup | Children 6 months to 3 year old | Progressive febrile stridor | Oral or parental dexamethasone | |
| Diphtheria | Lack of vaccination for | Progressive stridor | Empiric antibiotics | Culture of pseudomembranes |
| Tracheitis | Seasonal epidemic of parainfluenza, influenza and RSV | Acute stridor with high fever and respiratory distress | Bronchoscopy | Culture of bronchial aspiration |
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| Primary laryngeal or lung cancerSecondary metastasis: lung, renal, breast, thyroid, colon, sarcoma, melanomaBenign tumours: papillomatosis, sarcoidosis, amyloidosis, hamartomasGranulation tissue: post intubation/tracheostomy/stenting, foreign bodies, surgical anastomosis, granulomatosis with polyangiitisMucus plus blood clots | Mediastinal mass: | Glottic or tracheal stenosis (prolonged intubation, irradiation, congenital, idiopathic…)Tracheomalacia, relapsing polychondritisLaryngomalaciaLaryngospasmBilateral vocal cord palsyVocal cord dysfunctionWebs | ||
Figure 2Algorithm for management of a suspected foreign body aspiration. #: intentional right main bronchus intubation to advance the foreign body with the endotracheal tube, which is then pulled back into the trachea.
Figure 3Computed tomography scan of thorax in frontal (a), sagittal (b) and axial (c and d) views. Post-intubation tracheal stenosis, 8 mm of diameter (a, b and c: black arrow; d shows the normal tracheal lumen diameter, below the stenosis) in a 19-year-old woman, which was misdiagnosed for asthma for several years and was not improved with inhaled therapies. Correct diagnosis was established after an episode of acute respiratory distress with stridor. The patient underwent surgical treatment, allowing complete regression of her symptoms and no recurrence of the tracheal stenosis at 4 years follow-up.
Figure 4Computed tomography scan of thorax in frontal (a), sagittal (b) and axial (c) views; and bronchoscopy view (d). Pseudo-membranous tracheal stenosis revealed by an acute respiratory distress with stridor occurring immediately after extubation. This 55-year-old patient had been previously intubated over 3 days for surgical treatment of a gastric anastomosis perforation. Laryngoscopy was normal. Computed tomography scan of thorax (a) and flexible bronchoscopy (b) showed several pseudo-membranes obstructing the tracheal lumen. The patient coughed up the pseudo-membranes just before the planned rigid bronchoscopy for endoscopic resection, allowing spontaneous resolution of this rare post-intubation complication.
Figure 5Computed tomography scan of thorax axial view (a), coronal view (b), sagittal view (c). A tissue-density mass (white arrow) arises from the right anterolateral tracheal wall and nearly completely obstructs the tracheal lumen.
Figure 6Rigid bronchoscopy. Round, well limited, regular, firm, non-friable, hypervascularised, and white tumour, arising from the right tracheal wall, just above the carena, completely obstructing the tracheal lumen.
Figure 7Pathology: gross examination (a), microscopy examination (b). a) The tumour has a lobulated and encapsulated appearance, with a smooth pale and white surface. b) Hypercellular sheet of atypical chondrocytes with nodular growth pattern. Tumour cells have mild-to-moderate cytologic atypical and hyperchromatic nuclei without signs of mitoses, and a chondroid matrix.