000 02158nam a22004697a 4500
008 210726s20212021 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
024 _a10.1002/ppul.25515 [doi]
040 _aOvid MEDLINE(R)
099 _a34185970
245 _aPediatric tracheostomy surveillance.
251 _aPediatric Pulmonology. 56(9):3047-3050, 2021 09.
252 _aPediatr Pulmonol. 56(9):3047-3050, 2021 09.
252 _zPediatr Pulmonol. 2021 Jun 29
253 _aPediatric pulmonology
260 _c2021
260 _fFY2022
260 _p2021 Jun 29
265 _saheadofprint
265 _sppublish
266 _d2021-07-26
268 _aPediatric Pulmonology. 2021 Jun 29
269 _fFY2021
520 _aWe report an unusual case of a 14-month-old ex-28 week, ventilator-dependent male with a history of bronchopulmonary dysplasia and tracheostomy at 2 months of age. Lost to follow-up, at age 9 months, he presented to the emergency department with worsening respiratory distress. The patient was taken to the operating room at which time direct visualization of the airway demonstrated a mass filling the entire glottic inlet without supraglottic or pharyngeal mucosal attachments. The solid, nonvascular, mass appeared to be emanating from a suprastomal site. Excision proved to relieve the airway obstruction and postoperatively the patient has thrived. Copyright (c) 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
546 _aEnglish
650 _a*Airway Obstruction
650 _a*Tracheostomy
650 _aAirway Obstruction/et [Etiology]
650 _aAirway Obstruction/su [Surgery]
650 _aChild
650 _aHumans
650 _aInfant
650 _aInfant, Newborn
650 _aMale
651 _aMedStar Washington Hospital Center
656 _aOtolaryngology Residency
657 _aCase Reports
700 _aLeonard, James
790 _aEspinel A, Leonard JA, Mamidi IS, Mudd P
856 _uhttps://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ppul.25515
_zhttps://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ppul.25515
858 _yLeonard, James A
_uhttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-7955-0392
_zhttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-7955-0392
942 _cART
_dArticle
999 _c11047
_d11047