Actively Recruiting
Outcome of Resection Anastomosis and Long Term Stenting With Montgomery Tube Operations in Management of Grade 3 Benign Laryngotracheal Stenosis
Led by Sohag University · Updated on 2024-07-15
30
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
52 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Laryngotracheal stenosis is a challenging problem in the field of laryngology. In the majority of patients, acquired stenosis of the larynx and trachea is due to accidental trauma, prolonged intubations, or tracheostomy. Congenital stenosis, caustic injury, and granulomatous diseases are also etiological factors in laryngotracheal stenosis (Grenier PA et al, 2009). Tracheal stenosis can occur following tracheostomy or endotracheal intubation with inappropriate cuff pressure. It is due to pressure necrosis at the site of the cuff. Initially, there is inflammation of the damaged mucosa with increased secretion and secondary infection. Prolonged ischemia and secondary infection cause necrosis of the tracheal wall and exposure and sequestration of the cartilaginous rings. This damage results in the formation of granulation tissue and collapse of the tracheal wall (Satish Nair et al, 2014). The tracheal stenosis is classified as simple, which is a soft, short segment web-like narrowing often limited to the mucosa only or complex stenosis, which is a hard, long-segment stricture with destruction of tracheal cartilages and fibrosis. Post tracheostomy stenosis occurs most commonly at the stoma site or less commonly at the site where the tip of the tube has impinged on the tracheal mucosa (Liu J et al, 2015). The symptoms are generally insidious. Most arise 1 to 6 weeks after extubation, and early symptoms are often not recognized. The most common symptoms include shortness of breath, cough, recurrent pneumonia, wheezing, stridor, and cyanosis over time. Dyspnea is often the symptom until the tracheal diameter is 50% smaller than normal. When the tracheal diameter is 25% of its normal size, dyspnea and stridor may occur even at rest. These symptoms can be confused with other respiratory diseases (Rubikas R et al, 2014).
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Outcome of Resection Anastomosis and Long Term Stenting With Montgomery Tube Operations in Management of Grade 3 Benign Laryngotracheal Stenosis
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Patients diagnosed with laryngotracheal stenosis after tracheostomy or intubation
You will not qualify if you...
- Patients who have had laryngeal split and cartilaginous grafting surgery
- Patients who have undergone carinal resection
- Patients with incomplete medical records
- Patients with tracheal stenosis caused by conditions other than post-intubation, such as airway tumors, idiopathic stenosis, trauma, Wegener's granulomatosis, or chronic relapsing polychondritis
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Sohag University hospitals
Sohag, Egypt
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
A
awatef m ahmed, assisstant lecturer
CONTACT
I
Ibrahim r mohamed
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
2
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