Survival of a child without sequelae after tracheoarterial fistula (original) (raw)
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Post-tracheostomy tracheoinnominate fistula: endovascular treatment
2021
Objective: Tracheoinnominate fistula (TIF) is a rare and frequently lethal complication of tracheostomies. Immediate bleeding control and surgical treatment are essential to avoid death. This report describes the successful endovascular treatment of TIF in a preschooler and reviews the literature concerning epidemiology, diagnosis, prophylaxis, and treatment of TIF in pediatric patients. Case description: A tracheostomized neurologically impaired bed-ridden three-year-old girl was admitted to treat an episode of tracheitis. Tracheostomy had been performed two years before. The child used a plastic cuffed tube continually inflated at low pressure. The patient presented two self-limited bleeding episodes through the tracheostomy in a 48h interval. A new episode was suggestive of arterial bleeding, immediately leading to a provisional diagnosis of TIF, which was confirmed by angiotomography, affecting the bifurcation of the innominate artery and the right tracheal wall. The patient was...
Tracheo-Innominate Artery Fistula – A Surgical and Hemodynamic Emergency
International Journal of Scientific Research, 2012
Tracheoinnominate artery fistula is a rare complication occurring in less than 1% of tracheostomies. It presents as a surgical emergency because of the massive amount of bleeding associated with it. Management of tracheoinnominate artery fistula requires expertise in identifying the fistula site and also providing emergency fluid management in the form of blood and its substitutes. We present a successful management of such a case.
The “Fountain of Death”: A Case Series on Tracheo-innominate Artery Fistula
IIUM Medical Journal Malaysia
Tracheo-innominate artery fistula (TIF) is a very rare complication related to tracheostomy and has been reported in 0.7% of patients, but certainly is one of the most life-threatening conditions. It is of paramount importance to maintain a high index of suspicion in evaluating patients with TIF and to anticipate occurrence of massive haemorrhage even during simple procedures related to tracheostomy such as tube change. We report 3 cases of TIF, each with a unique and unsuspecting history of the condition and review the emergency protocol in arresting the bleeding. We’ve also highlighted the potential role of permissive hypotension with sedation in improving survival outcomes of patients with TIF.
Journal of General and Family Medicine
Tracheo-innominate artery fistula (TIF) is a rare but life-threatening complication of tracheostomy. We describe a 44-year-old man who was admitted for a pressure ulcer infection with a third tracheostomy in place. He showed massive hemoptysis from the TIF, followed by cardiopulmonary arrest. The cuff of the tube was hyperinflated; however, even a slight movement of the tube resulted in recurrent massive hemorrhage. Thus, an endovascular stent graft was placed. Our case shows that sentinel bleeding may be found prior to TIF, and an endovascular repair can be a lifesaving temporizing option, when the hemorrhage was not controlled by hyperinflating the cuff of the tube.
Endovascular treatment of tracheoinnominate artery fistula: a case report
Vascular and endovascular surgery, 2006
Tracheoinnominate fistula is a rare but lethal condition that requires emergent surgical intervention to prevent ensuing exsanguinating hemorrhage. In clinical situations where the risk of open surgery is prohibitively high, endovascular repair may provide a life-saving alternative to control hemorrhage and serve as a temporizing or definitive solution based on a given clinical scenario. The authors report successful endovascular repair of the bleeding tracheoinnominate fistula with a stent in a liver transplant patient with high comorbidities and review the current literature.
Operative technique for tracheo-innominate artery fistula repair
Journal of Vascular Surgery, 2014
Tracheo-innominate artery fistula is fatal unless treated surgically. We describe our surgical approach and results in seven patients. The average patient age was 15.7 years; all patients had prior severe neurological deficits. Three of seven patients were in hemorrhagic shock; control of preoperative bleeding was achieved with tracheostomy tube cuff overinflation. The innominate artery and the trachea were exposed through a collar incision and partial upper sternotomy. The innominate artery was divided at the aortic arch and at the bifurcation, with one exception. Cerebral blood flow was monitored by the blood pressure difference in the bilateral upper extremities and by near-infrared spectroscopy. The tracheal fistula was left adherent to the innominate artery in all but one patient. All patients were discharged without new neurologic deficits or severe morbidity. Overall survival was 84% at 37 months, without any vascular, tracheal, or neurological events.
Exsanguinating tracheoinnominate artery fistula repaired with endovascular stent-graft
Surgical Neurology, 2008
Background: Tracheoinnominate artery fistula is a relatively rare but life-threatening complication of tracheostomy. Peristomal bleed or hemoptysis may be massive and usually fatal if treatment is not instituted immediately. Case Description: We report the case of a 40-year-old woman who sustained surgical evacuation of a brainstem cavernoma and developed a massive hemoptysis 13 days after a percutaneous tracheostomy. Because of the patient's poor clinical condition, endovascular repair of the arterial injury was decided. The innominate artery was successfully repaired by means of urgent stent-graft placement. Conclusions: We believe that, if technically feasible, stent-graft placement can be a valuable therapeutic alternative for this dramatic condition. Physicians in charge of tracheostomized patients and neurointerventionalists should be familiar with this management strategy.
Endovascular Repair of a Tracheoinnominate Fistula with a Stent Graft
Vascular, 2008
Massive bleeding from a tracheostomy developed in a 65-year-old woman with stroke after successful conservative management of a minor tracheostomy bleeding episode. Temporary hemostasis was achieved, and angiography showed a tracheoinnominate fistula (TIF), a rare complication of tracheostomy. Open surgery was contraindicated in this patient, so endovascular repair using a stent graft was performed. Permanent hemostasis was obtained, and there were no immediate complications from the procedure. The patient never recovered from her stroke and died 2 weeks later. The endovascular approach may be a feasible alternative to surgical repair of TIF, especially in patients unable to tolerate an open procedure.