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Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia

Background: Most of the studies regarding the surgical treatment of severe laryngomalacia (LM) have been aimed at describing the efficacy of the treatment in terms of improvement of clinical symptoms or anatomical findings. There are no studies specifically aimed at analyzing the changes in breathin...

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Autores principales: Cialente, Fabrizio, Meucci, Duino, Tropiano, Maria Luisa, Salvati, Antonio, Torsello, Miriam, Savignoni, Ferdinando, Landolfo, Francesca, Dotta, Andrea, Trozzi, Marilena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8700109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943316
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8121120
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author Cialente, Fabrizio
Meucci, Duino
Tropiano, Maria Luisa
Salvati, Antonio
Torsello, Miriam
Savignoni, Ferdinando
Landolfo, Francesca
Dotta, Andrea
Trozzi, Marilena
author_facet Cialente, Fabrizio
Meucci, Duino
Tropiano, Maria Luisa
Salvati, Antonio
Torsello, Miriam
Savignoni, Ferdinando
Landolfo, Francesca
Dotta, Andrea
Trozzi, Marilena
author_sort Cialente, Fabrizio
collection PubMed
description Background: Most of the studies regarding the surgical treatment of severe laryngomalacia (LM) have been aimed at describing the efficacy of the treatment in terms of improvement of clinical symptoms or anatomical findings. There are no studies specifically aimed at analyzing the changes in breathing patterns following surgical treatment for severe LM. Objective: To review the breathing pattern changes before and after corrective surgery in infants with severe LM. Study design: A series of retrospective cases at a tertiary referral children’s hospital. Methods: Retrospective chart review of 81 infants who underwent supra-glottoplasty (SGP) for severe laryngomalacia between 2011 and 2020 at Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital of Rome, Italy. Among the patients, 47 (58%) were male and 34 (42%) were female. Twenty-one patients (26%) had one or more comorbidities condition. The data collected included age, symptoms, a polysomnography/pulse oximetry study, growth rate, the findings from flexible endoscopy, pre- and post-supra-glottoplasty (SGP) pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and, when indicated, 24 h pH-metry. Breathing patterns were studied during restful, normal sleep, using an ultrasonic flow-meter (Exhalyzer, Viasys) which measured: Tidal Volume (Vt), Respiratory Rate (RR), time to peak expiratory flow/expiratory time ratio (tPTEF/Te, an index of the patency of the lower airways) and mean expiratory/mean inspiratory flow ratio (MEF/MIF, an index of the patency of the upper airways) evaluated before surgical procedure (T1) and 3–6 weeks after (T2). Pre- and post-operative mean data were calculated and comparisons made with a Student T-test. Results: The surgical procedure was well tolerated by all infants and no intraoperative or post-operatory long-term complications were noted. In T1, breathing patterns were characterized by low tidal volume and high tPTEF/Te and MEF/MIF ratios, suggesting a severe reduction in the patency of the upper airways in all patients. After surgery (T2), all the previously mentioned variables significantly improved, reaching normal values for the child’s age. Conclusions: Supra-glottoplasty, as already described in several studies, is a safe and efficient procedure to treat severe laryngomalacia during infancy. The improvement in breathing patterns after surgery was reliably confirmed by a lung function test in our study, which showed the diagnostic value of testing respiratory functionality in the laryngomalacia and comparing them to clinical and endoscopic data. Moreover, considering the results obtained, we also propose the use of this available, dependable test to verify its therapeutic effects (post-surgery) and to monitor future respiratory development in these infants. Moreover, we believe that further studies will provide detailed grading guidelines for gravity of the LM, based on these functional lung tests.
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spelling pubmed-87001092021-12-24 Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia Cialente, Fabrizio Meucci, Duino Tropiano, Maria Luisa Salvati, Antonio Torsello, Miriam Savignoni, Ferdinando Landolfo, Francesca Dotta, Andrea Trozzi, Marilena Children (Basel) Article Background: Most of the studies regarding the surgical treatment of severe laryngomalacia (LM) have been aimed at describing the efficacy of the treatment in terms of improvement of clinical symptoms or anatomical findings. There are no studies specifically aimed at analyzing the changes in breathing patterns following surgical treatment for severe LM. Objective: To review the breathing pattern changes before and after corrective surgery in infants with severe LM. Study design: A series of retrospective cases at a tertiary referral children’s hospital. Methods: Retrospective chart review of 81 infants who underwent supra-glottoplasty (SGP) for severe laryngomalacia between 2011 and 2020 at Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital of Rome, Italy. Among the patients, 47 (58%) were male and 34 (42%) were female. Twenty-one patients (26%) had one or more comorbidities condition. The data collected included age, symptoms, a polysomnography/pulse oximetry study, growth rate, the findings from flexible endoscopy, pre- and post-supra-glottoplasty (SGP) pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and, when indicated, 24 h pH-metry. Breathing patterns were studied during restful, normal sleep, using an ultrasonic flow-meter (Exhalyzer, Viasys) which measured: Tidal Volume (Vt), Respiratory Rate (RR), time to peak expiratory flow/expiratory time ratio (tPTEF/Te, an index of the patency of the lower airways) and mean expiratory/mean inspiratory flow ratio (MEF/MIF, an index of the patency of the upper airways) evaluated before surgical procedure (T1) and 3–6 weeks after (T2). Pre- and post-operative mean data were calculated and comparisons made with a Student T-test. Results: The surgical procedure was well tolerated by all infants and no intraoperative or post-operatory long-term complications were noted. In T1, breathing patterns were characterized by low tidal volume and high tPTEF/Te and MEF/MIF ratios, suggesting a severe reduction in the patency of the upper airways in all patients. After surgery (T2), all the previously mentioned variables significantly improved, reaching normal values for the child’s age. Conclusions: Supra-glottoplasty, as already described in several studies, is a safe and efficient procedure to treat severe laryngomalacia during infancy. The improvement in breathing patterns after surgery was reliably confirmed by a lung function test in our study, which showed the diagnostic value of testing respiratory functionality in the laryngomalacia and comparing them to clinical and endoscopic data. Moreover, considering the results obtained, we also propose the use of this available, dependable test to verify its therapeutic effects (post-surgery) and to monitor future respiratory development in these infants. Moreover, we believe that further studies will provide detailed grading guidelines for gravity of the LM, based on these functional lung tests. MDPI 2021-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8700109/ /pubmed/34943316 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8121120 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cialente, Fabrizio
Meucci, Duino
Tropiano, Maria Luisa
Salvati, Antonio
Torsello, Miriam
Savignoni, Ferdinando
Landolfo, Francesca
Dotta, Andrea
Trozzi, Marilena
Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title_full Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title_fullStr Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title_short Changes in Breathing Patterns after Surgery in Severe Laryngomalacia
title_sort changes in breathing patterns after surgery in severe laryngomalacia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8700109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943316
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8121120
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