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Research ArticleConference Proceedings

Care of the Chronic Tracheostomy

Rajiv Dhand and Jeremy C Johnson
Respiratory Care September 2006, 51 (9) 984-1004;
Rajiv Dhand
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Environmental Medicine; Department of Internal Medicine; University of Missouri-Columbia; and with Harry S Truman Veterans Affairs Hospital, Columbia, Missouri.
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Jeremy C Johnson
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Environmental Medicine; Department of Internal Medicine; University of Missouri-Columbia; and with Harry S Truman Veterans Affairs Hospital, Columbia, Missouri.
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Abstract

A minority of patients with neuromuscular disease require placement of a tracheostomy, usually for the purpose of providing mechanical ventilation. Often the tracheostomy is performed during a hospital admission for an acute illness. The debate about the appropriate timing of tracheostomy in critically ill patients has not been resolved; however, the weight of evidence now favors performing a tracheostomy early (within 7 d of translaryngeal intubation) if the period of mechanical ventilation is likely to be prolonged beyond 3 weeks. For patients with chronic progressive weakness who develop respiratory difficulty, the consensus of opinion is that tracheostomy should be performed in patients with severe bulbar involvement, inability to effectively cough up secretions despite mechanical aids for secretion clearance, or for those who are unable to tolerate or fail noninvasive ventilation. The decision to perform tracheostomy in patients with chronic neuromuscular weakness involves consideration of several factors, including complications, resources, quality of life, ethical issues, cosmetic issues, and cost. Complications from tracheostomy and physician-perceived poor quality of life often lead to a negative bias, such that some patients may be denied this life-saving procedure. Special training is needed to provide long-term tracheostomy care, and an organized approach should be followed to decannulate patients who recover from their acute illness. Appropriate and skilled care could significantly improve the longevity and quality of life of those patients with neuromuscular disease who have a tracheostomy for long-term ventilation.

  • neuromuscular disease
  • tracheostomy
  • mechanical ventilation
  • intubation
  • weakness
  • secretion clearance
  • noninvasive ventilation
  • quality of life

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Rajiv Dhand MD, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Environmental Medicine; MA-421 Health Sciences Center; DC043.00; 1 Hospital Drive; University of Missouri-Columbia; Columbia MO 65212. E-mail: dhandr{at}health.missouri.edu.
  • Rajiv Dhand MD FAARC presented a version of this paper at the 37th RESPIRATORY CARE Journal Conference, “Neuromuscular Disease in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine,” held March 17-19, 2006, in Ixtapa, Mexico.

  • Copyright © 2006 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.
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Respiratory Care: 51 (9)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 51, Issue 9
1 Sep 2006
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Care of the Chronic Tracheostomy
Rajiv Dhand, Jeremy C Johnson
Respiratory Care Sep 2006, 51 (9) 984-1004;

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Care of the Chronic Tracheostomy
Rajiv Dhand, Jeremy C Johnson
Respiratory Care Sep 2006, 51 (9) 984-1004;
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Keywords

  • neuromuscular disease
  • tracheostomy
  • mechanical ventilation
  • intubation
  • weakness
  • secretion clearance
  • noninvasive ventilation
  • quality of life

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