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Respiratory conditions. Anne Aspin 2010. Embryology. Atresia of oesophagus with fistula Atresia of trachea with fistula Laryngo-tracheo-oesophageal clefts System of folds, blocked pathway Adriamycin (rat research). Defects caused by improper development of the pleuro-peritoneal cavity
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Respiratory conditions Anne Aspin 2010
Embryology • Atresia of oesophagus with fistula • Atresia of trachea with fistula • Laryngo-tracheo-oesophageal clefts • System of folds, blocked pathway • Adriamycin (rat research)
Defects caused by improper development of the pleuro-peritoneal cavity • Failure of muscularisation of the lumbocostal and pleuro-peritoneal canal, weak part of diaphragm. • Pushing of intestine through foramen of Bochdalek of diaphragm.
Premature return of intestine to abdo cavity but canal still open • Abnormal persistance of lung in pleuro peritoneal cavity, preventing closure of cavity • Abnormal development of early lung.
Of these theories failure of the pleuro-peritoneal membrane to meet the transverse septum is likely explanation for diaphragm herniation • Lack of embryological evidence • Day 13,(L) Day 14 (R), disturbed development (rats) = 4-5/52 embryos.
Lung hypoplasia • From day 14 of deformation lung hypoplasia caused by liver growing through diaphragmatic defect into thoracic cavity. • Liver grows at a faster rate than the lungs.
Head and Neck Examination • Respirations – 30 – 60 bpm • Abnormal < 30, > 60 bpm, nasal flaring,intercostal recesssion • Apnoea, anoxia, alkalosis • Slow, weak, rapid signifies brain damage • Tachypnoea, congenital heart disease, resp disease. • Asymmetry, phrenic nerve palsy, CDH, atelectasis
Examination of the nose • Broad flat, chromosomal abnormality • Patency, choanal atresia, tumour • Sneezing • Bloody discharge, syphilis
Examination of the mouth and throat • Excessive saliva • Abnormal structures, cleft lip and palate, micrognathia, large tongue, absent or unequal reflexes, prematurity or CNS anomaly • Distended neck veins indicate chest or pneumomediastinal mass.
Oesophageal atresia • Bubbly secretions • Apnoea • Cyanosis • Immediate vomiting on feeding • Unable to pass ng tube • Replogle tube, continual pharyngeal suction
Types of oesophageal atresia and fistula 86% 7% 4%
Types continued 1% <1 <1
Lungs and Thorax • Crackles and rhonchi present first four hours after birth. • Abnormal: decreased abdominal breathing • Thoracic and asymmetrical breathing – phrenic nerve damage, CDH, • Hyperresonance may indicate pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, CDH
Stridor Unexplained wheeze Unexplained or persistent cough Haemoptysis Suspected foreign body Suspected airway trauma, chemical, or thermal injury Suspected tracheobronchial fistula Suspected tracheobronchial stenosis Radiological abnormalities Persistent or recurrent consolidation or atelectasis Recurrent or persistent infiltrates Lung lesions of unknown aetiology Immunosupressed patients Identify cause of pneumonia Recurrence of disease Cystic fibrosis Identify cause of infection Intensive care Examine for the position, patency, or damage related to endotracheal or tracheostomy tubes Facilitation of endotracheal intubation Endobronchial stent placement Indications for bronchoscopy
Bronchoscopy • Early dates, removal of foreign bodies • Rigid bronchoscope (telescope fits down), complete control of airway, ventilation • Flexible bronchoscope (bundles of optical fibres, light to the tips), children from 3yrs
Complications of bronchoscopy • Pneumothorax 8% • Incidence reduced if bronchoscope avoiding right middle lobe • Haemorrhage following biopsy • Pyrexia, dyspnoea
Choanal atresia • Complete or partial • Bilateral or unilateral • Dyspnoea, apnoea when feeding • Thick mucus in nasal cavities • Feeding difficulties • Blockage of catheter at 3cm. • Stents are required.
Congenital laryngeal stridor • Laryngomalacia • Inspiratory stridor • Suprasternal indrawing • Noise increase with crying, decrease with sleeping • Cause: long, curved epiglottis • Spontaneous recovery 2-3years.
Common causes • Laryngomalacia – 60% • Congenital subglottic stenosis • Vocal cord palsy - unilateral, birth trauma – temporary • Bilateral vocal cord palsy assoc other congenital anomalies
Morimoto et al (2004) • 97 patients 1991-2001 • Laryngomalacia 32% • Vocal cord palsy and laryngeal stenosis 22%, within 2/12, severe dyspnoea • Haemangioma or papilloma 11% • Cystic disease 7%
cont • 2 / 31 of laryngomalacia and 2 / 22 VCP had neuromuscular disorders • 3 of VCP complicated by laryngeal stenosis • 33 / 97 Tracheostomy • Sometimes stridor is the only presenting symptom. Past history important
Case history • 6/12 girl • Fever, coughing • Inspiratory stridor • Palpable neck swelling, bulging pharyngeal wall • Limited movement of neck • ? spasmodic croup, lymphadenitis coli • Found to be retro pharyngeal abscess
Treatment • Oral incision • Drainage of abscess • Antibiotics
Unilateral vocal cord paralysis • Stridor • Laryngospasm • Dyspnoea • Cause by abnormal innervation of nerve branches into adductor fibers
Research Objective • Determine stridor at rest after oral Prednisolone 1mg/kg • And whether quick response after mild croup
Method • Retrospective explicit chart review of children over 1 year of age admitted to a teaching hospital • Patient demographics • Croup scores at AE • Duration of stridor at rest after steroids
Results • 188 cases analysed • Median duration at rest was 6.5 hrs, range 0.5 hrs- 82 hrs • Patients with low score at AE recovered quicker in response to steroids, early discharge home.
Amphotericin induced stridor • Adverse effects reported Amphotericin B • Dyspnoea • Tachypnoea • Bronchospasm • Haemoptysis • hypoxia
Objective • To review mechanism of action and reports of respiratory adverse effects for Amphotericin B, the liposomal preparations for Amphotericin B and the differential diagnosis of stridor • Medline search 1966 – 2002 looking for possible mechanisms and immunoregulatory effects of Ampho B
Results • Amphotericin B shows increase in tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) concentrations in macrophages. • Induces prostaglandin E2 synthesis, increasing production of interleukin1 beta in mononuclear cells
Conclusion • Amphotericin B induces production of TNF alpha, interferon gamma and interleukin 1 beta which have toxic effects.
Medicines for children • Test dose infused over 30 mins – 100mcg • Renal impairment • Low serum pott, mag, phos • Lft’s • arrhythmias • Pulmonary reactions if Amph and leucocyte Tx.
Subglottic stenosis, 1-8% • Tracheostomy • Cystic hygroma • Haemangioma
Case history 1 • Girl, 3.55kg, LSCS, 37/40 • TTN, ett, ventilation • Day 3, pyrexia, measle like exanthema,thrombocytopenia • Diagnosis, toxic shock syndrome. Ax. • Day 5 yellow tracheal secretions, glottis red, not swollen • MRSA, Day 13 extubated, stridor.
Case history 2 • Baby girl, 2.790kg, LSCS, 37/40. • At 3hrs, ett,ventilated, TTN • Day 3, pyrexia • Day 6 yellow secretions, epiglottis red, not swollen • Diagnosis: laryngotracheitis, MRSA • Tracheostomy
Tracheomalacia • Normal struts of cartilage which maintain the trachea patent are either malformed (OA,TOF) or compressed by vessels. • Collapse of trachea • Apnoea, resus (bag and mask opens airway)
Where site of fistula repair in TOF: Supporting cartilage framework not fully formed, floppy airway Specialised lining cells (goblet and cilia) are replaced by squamous cells, less effective in protecting airway.
Severe tracheomalacia • 4-6mths age • Excessive wheeze • Cyanosis • Particularly during feed • Near death episodes • Trachea collapses, no air can pass through
Tests for tracheomalacia • Radiography (side on) • Barium meal • Bronchoscopy • Respiratory function tests
Case history 1 • 24/40, antenatal steroids 48hrs, wt 765g • Ventilated 20 days, stridor • At 100 days failure to extubate laryngo-tracheobronchomalacia • 90% occlusion lower trachea • 70% occlusion left main bronchus • Unsuccessful aortapexy, cpap, trache • At 18ths no malacia
Case history 2 • 25/40, 772g, male, hyaline membrane disease, curosurf x2 • Ventilated 6/52, recurrent stridor • Subglottic stridor, Day 160 tracheobronchogram, collapse right bronchus
Case history 3 • 34/40, infant of diabetic mum, bw 1162g • Moderate severe RDS, curosurf, vent 21/7 • Oxygen desats at one year, vented again. • Tracheobronchogram at 16mths, severe malacia of left main bronchus • Cpap via tracheostomy.
Compressive disorder • Double aortic arch, (embryiological) • Compresses right main bronchus and lower trachea • This condition is result of failure of posterior cricoid lamina and trachea oesophageal septum to fuse • MRI
CCAM • Chin and Tang (1949) • Proliferation of cysts resembling bronchioles • 25% of all lung lesions
Pathogenesis and pathophysiologic features • Focal arrest of fetal lung development before 7th week development • Secondary to pulmonary insults • 4-26% associated with other congenital anomalies