Emerging Concepts in Airway Infantile Hemangioma Assessment and Management
2009; Wiley; Volume: 141; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.otohns.2009.04.013
ISSN1097-6817
AutoresJonathan A. Perkins, William S. Duke, Eunice Y. Chen, Scott C. Manning,
Tópico(s)Tumors and Oncological Cases
ResumoThe purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in airway infantile hemangioma treatment.Retrospective.Airway hemangioma patients, tertiary pediatric hospital.Data collected included age at diagnosis, evaluation methods, hospitalizations, airway size, and interventions. Patients were divided into group A (1981-1993) and group B (1994-2005) and were analyzed using descriptive statistics, the Fisher exact test, and the Student t test.Thirty-two subjects were identified. Nasopharyngoscopy was used more in group B (11/16 [69%]) than group A (4/16 [25%], P=0.032). CT angiography (3/16 [19%]) and laryngeal distractors (11/16 [69%]) were only used in group B; these techniques showed airway hemangiomas to be "transglottic," not just "subglottic." Intralesional steroids alone (3/16 [19%]) and primary hemangioma excision (2/16 [13%]) were new treatments used in group B. Frequent direct laryngoscopies (>six) correlated with tracheotomy (5/32 [16%], P=0.015). Presenting age (<2 months) impacted treatment more than airway hemangioma size.New methods of airway infantile hemangioma assessment changed our concept of airway hemangiomas and their primary treatment.
Referência(s)