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Tracheal stenosis

From Surgopaedia

Aetiology

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  • Tracheotomy
    • Severity of stenosis depends on extension of the defect, necrosis and infection
    • Symptoms can occur immediately after decannulation or years later
  • Ventilation
  • Trauma
  • Malignancy

Presentation

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  • Dyspnoea on exertion is the main symptom
  • Wheeze, stridor, cough, difficulty clearing secretions, recurrent URTI, hoarseness
  • 50% reduction in cross-sectional area of trachea results in dyspnoea only with significant exertion, whereas narrowing of the lumen to <25% usually produces dyspnoea and stridor at rest
  • A 5-6mm lumen reduces peak expiratory flow rate to 30%
  • Usually have stridor or wheezing if they have significant airway obstruction

Workup

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  • Spirometry and flow volume loops are not helpful in diagnosis
  • If no respiratory distress, CT is best
  • Bronchoscopic evaluation will give diagnosis most of the time
    • Flexible bronchoscopy is ok for diagnosis, but rigid bronchoscopy is needed for intervention, especially in an emergency (dilation/core out of tumour/laser/stenting)
    • Look for anatomic location, proximal and distal extent, and diameter of stenosis

Indications for tracheal resection

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  • Post-intubation or post-tracheostomy stenosis
    • Prolonged cuff pressure causes full-thickness necrosis of the tracheal cartilage, causing symptoms from circumferential scar contracture 3-6 weeks after extubation
    • Stomal stenosis from tracheostomy occurs with scarring at the anterior tracheal defect (anterior narrowing with normal posterior membranous wall)
    • Post-intubation stenosis is amenable to dilation, whereas post-tracheostomy is not
  • Trauma
  • Inflammatory
    • Tracheal infections
    • Collagen vascular diseases
  • Idiopathic tracheal stenosis
    • Occurs most commonly in 20-50yo women, focused at the level of the cricoid cartilage with varying degrees of subglottic involvement
  • Primary tracheal tumours
    • Consider these for resection if they can be removed with less than half of the longitudinal length of the trachea, and do not have unresectable local extension
    • SCC
    • Adenoid cystic carcinoma
    • Carcinoid
    • Mucoepidermoid
  • Local tumours with airway invasion
    • Almost never an indication for tracheal resection, but locally advanced thyroid cancer may be considered, even in the presence of metastatic disease (because prognosis is still pretty good)

Anaesthesia/airway management

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  • Stomal stenosis can nearly always be intubated without difficulty, whereas post-intubation stenosis might be harder
  • Anaesthesia for tracheal resection is normally given as mixed inhalational/IV, while maintaining spontaneous ventilation until airway is established
  • Aim to extubate in OT

Surgical technique

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  • Tracheal resection now thought to be safe up to 5-6cm
  • Most benign stenoses approached through neck incision - thoracotomy rarely required

Post-op support

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  • Manually support neck flexion to prevent hyper-extension and associated strain on anastomosis
  • Laryngeal oedema manifests within 24-72 hours and typically resolves without any intervention
  • Subcutaneous emphysema post-op likely represents anastomotic dehiscence - surgical emergency - needs airway secured - bronchoscopy to evaluate anastomosis