Abstract
There is little evidence-based literature on the management of tracheostomized patients. The existing data relate to the role of tracheostomy in specific disease states, the timing of tracheostomy, and comparison of open surgical to percutaneous tracheostomy. Tracheostomy protocols are under development. A recent series of 1,130 patients who underwent tracheostomy had a combined procedural, early, and late complication rate of approximately 4%, which is an improvement from the earlier complication rate. In the recent series, tracheal stenosis overtook hemorrhage as the leading complication, by 2 to 1. Tracheal stenosis accounted for nearly half of the complications. Half of the tracheal stenoses required surgical correction. All the patients who developed tracheal stenosis had endotracheal tubes for > 12 days before tracheostomy.
- tracheostomy
- tracheal stenosis
- complications
- evidence-based management
- inpatient
- acute care
- intensive care unit
Footnotes
- Correspondence: Keith E Littlewood MD, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville VA 22908–0710. E-mail: klittlewood{at}virginia.edu.
Keith E Littlewood MD presented a version of this paper at the 20th Annual New Horizons Symposium at the 50th International Respiratory Congress, held December 4–7, 2004, in New Orleans, Louisiana.
- Copyright © 2005 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.