Use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for bronchoscopic removal of a tracheal foreign body in a child

Authors : D.V.T. Harischandra; Richard K. Firmin; J. M. R. G. Jayaweera; A Wickramasinghe
article cite 3 Year 2022
source: The Journal of Laryngology & Otology
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bronchoscopic removal of a foreign body is a common emergency procedure in paediatric otolaryngology. It is potentially life-threatening, as complete airway obstruction caused by the foreign body can lead to hypoxic cardiac arrest during the manipulation of the object. CASE REPORT: This paper presents a child who had aspirated a foreign body that could not be extracted conventionally via rigid bronchoscopy in the first instance. Subsequently, it was extracted at repeat bronchoscopy under controlled respiratory conditions maintained by an extracorporeal gas exchange circuit - extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, using a polypropylene hollow fibre oxygenator commonly employed in cardiac surgery (rather than a more expensive polymethyl pentene oxygenator commonly used in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation). CONCLUSION: Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation use can be considered in exceptional cases of upper airway emergencies, even in resource-poor settings, and can avoid more hazardous thoracotomy and bronchotomy procedures.


Concepts :
Pleural and Pulmonary Diseases
Foreign Body Medical Cases
Trauma Management and Diagnosis
article cite 3 Year 2022 source The Journal of Laryngology & Otology
Access to Document
10.1017/s0022215122002171
SDGs
No poverty
Citations by Year
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2022 3