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Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy

Objective Tracheostomy is one of the oldest operations for the management of airway obstruction. With time, indications expanded to prolonged mechanical ventilation, and currently, the majority of tracheostomies are done for this reason. There are several techniques used in a tracheostomy procedure,...

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Autores principales: Bathula, Samba Siva, Srikantha, Luxman, Patrick, Tyler, Stern, Noah A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7757757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33381358
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12228
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author Bathula, Samba Siva
Srikantha, Luxman
Patrick, Tyler
Stern, Noah A
author_facet Bathula, Samba Siva
Srikantha, Luxman
Patrick, Tyler
Stern, Noah A
author_sort Bathula, Samba Siva
collection PubMed
description Objective Tracheostomy is one of the oldest operations for the management of airway obstruction. With time, indications expanded to prolonged mechanical ventilation, and currently, the majority of tracheostomies are done for this reason. There are several techniques used in a tracheostomy procedure, depending on surgeon preference. Immediate complications such as bleeding, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, airway fire, and posterior tracheal wall perforation with esophageal injury are rare, although they do occur, and must be managed accordingly. This study aimed to assess differences in types and rates of immediate postoperative complications in patients undergoing tracheostomy when performed under general anesthesia and local anesthesia (awake tracheostomies) at a large academic institution. This is a continuing ongoing literature reporting tracheostomy adverse events. Methods A retrospective chart review was performed to identify patients who underwent tracheostomy placement between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2019 at the Detroit Medical Center, USA. Postoperative complications such as bleeding, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, airway fire, and posterior tracheal perforation were collected along with gender, age, and revision tracheostomy status. IBM SPSS Statistics (IBM Inc., Armonk, USA) was used for statistical analysis with the statical significance defined as a p<0.05. Results A total of 1,469 patient charts were reviewed. Of these, 1,342 met the inclusion and exclusion criteria, of which, males were 57.2% (n=768), and females were 42.8% (n=574). The age range was 18 years to 96 years (mean=58.03; SD= 15.97), and BMI range was 12-83 (mean=28.77; SD=7.885). Multinomial logistic regression was performed to determine whether age, BMI, sex, and revision tracheostomies were represented across both general and awake tracheostomy groups proportionally to their numbers in the total sample. It showed non-significant value for age (χ2=0.776, p=0.378), BMI (χ2=0.004, p=0.947), but significant value for sex (χ2=4.645, p=0.031), revision tracheostomy (χ2=18.282, p<0.001), indicating that males and revision tracheostomies over-represented in awake tracheostomies. Next, Pearson correlation analysis was performed to determine any significant linear relationship between age, sex, and tracheostomy complications. It showed a significant positive correlation between age and tracheal stomal infection [r(1,340)=0.062, p=0.022]. An independent sample t-test showed a statistically significant difference between the mean pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum of general (n=1,277, mean=0.01, SD=0.088) and awake tracheostomies (n=65, mean=0.08, SD=0.269, t=2.069, p=0.043). Pneumothorax pneumomediastinum complications between the general tracheostomy and awake tracheostomy odds ratio (OR)-6.22, indicates the chance of pneumothorax /pneumomediastinum complication is 6.22 times more in awake tracheostomy than general tracheostomy. Based on the above statistical analysis, we rejected the null hypothesis. Conclusions Tracheostomy is the procedure of choice to relieve the upper airway obstruction and treat patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation. A slightly higher number of Immediate postoperative complications in awake tracheostomy were noticed in patients with more surgically challenging revision tracheostomies.
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spelling pubmed-77577572020-12-29 Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy Bathula, Samba Siva Srikantha, Luxman Patrick, Tyler Stern, Noah A Cureus Otolaryngology Objective Tracheostomy is one of the oldest operations for the management of airway obstruction. With time, indications expanded to prolonged mechanical ventilation, and currently, the majority of tracheostomies are done for this reason. There are several techniques used in a tracheostomy procedure, depending on surgeon preference. Immediate complications such as bleeding, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, airway fire, and posterior tracheal wall perforation with esophageal injury are rare, although they do occur, and must be managed accordingly. This study aimed to assess differences in types and rates of immediate postoperative complications in patients undergoing tracheostomy when performed under general anesthesia and local anesthesia (awake tracheostomies) at a large academic institution. This is a continuing ongoing literature reporting tracheostomy adverse events. Methods A retrospective chart review was performed to identify patients who underwent tracheostomy placement between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2019 at the Detroit Medical Center, USA. Postoperative complications such as bleeding, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, airway fire, and posterior tracheal perforation were collected along with gender, age, and revision tracheostomy status. IBM SPSS Statistics (IBM Inc., Armonk, USA) was used for statistical analysis with the statical significance defined as a p<0.05. Results A total of 1,469 patient charts were reviewed. Of these, 1,342 met the inclusion and exclusion criteria, of which, males were 57.2% (n=768), and females were 42.8% (n=574). The age range was 18 years to 96 years (mean=58.03; SD= 15.97), and BMI range was 12-83 (mean=28.77; SD=7.885). Multinomial logistic regression was performed to determine whether age, BMI, sex, and revision tracheostomies were represented across both general and awake tracheostomy groups proportionally to their numbers in the total sample. It showed non-significant value for age (χ2=0.776, p=0.378), BMI (χ2=0.004, p=0.947), but significant value for sex (χ2=4.645, p=0.031), revision tracheostomy (χ2=18.282, p<0.001), indicating that males and revision tracheostomies over-represented in awake tracheostomies. Next, Pearson correlation analysis was performed to determine any significant linear relationship between age, sex, and tracheostomy complications. It showed a significant positive correlation between age and tracheal stomal infection [r(1,340)=0.062, p=0.022]. An independent sample t-test showed a statistically significant difference between the mean pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum of general (n=1,277, mean=0.01, SD=0.088) and awake tracheostomies (n=65, mean=0.08, SD=0.269, t=2.069, p=0.043). Pneumothorax pneumomediastinum complications between the general tracheostomy and awake tracheostomy odds ratio (OR)-6.22, indicates the chance of pneumothorax /pneumomediastinum complication is 6.22 times more in awake tracheostomy than general tracheostomy. Based on the above statistical analysis, we rejected the null hypothesis. Conclusions Tracheostomy is the procedure of choice to relieve the upper airway obstruction and treat patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation. A slightly higher number of Immediate postoperative complications in awake tracheostomy were noticed in patients with more surgically challenging revision tracheostomies. Cureus 2020-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7757757/ /pubmed/33381358 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12228 Text en Copyright © 2020, Bathula et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Otolaryngology
Bathula, Samba Siva
Srikantha, Luxman
Patrick, Tyler
Stern, Noah A
Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title_full Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title_fullStr Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title_full_unstemmed Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title_short Immediate Postoperative Complications in Adult Tracheostomy
title_sort immediate postoperative complications in adult tracheostomy
topic Otolaryngology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7757757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33381358
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12228
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