Damage control of laryngotracheal trauma: the golden day.
Mario Alain HerreraLuis Fernando TintinagoWilliam Victoria MoralesCarlos A OrdoñezMichael W ParraMateo Betancourt-CajiaoEdgar-Yaset CaicedoMónica Guzmán-RodríguezLinda M GallegoAdolfo González HadadLuis Fernando PinoJosé Julián SernaAlberto Federico GarcíaCarlos SernaFabian HernándezPublished in: Colombia medica (Cali, Colombia) (2020)
Laryngotracheal trauma is rare but potentially life-threatening as it implies a high risk of compromising airway patency. A consensus on damage control management for laryngotracheal trauma is presented in this article. Tracheal injuries require a primary repair. In the setting of massive destruction, the airway patency must be assured, local hemostasis and control measures should be performed, and definitive management must be deferred. On the other hand, management of laryngeal trauma should be conservative, primary repair should be chosen only if minimal disruption, otherwise, management should be delayed. Definitive management must be carried out, if possible, in the first 24 hours by a multidisciplinary team conformed by trauma and emergency surgery, head and neck surgery, otorhinolaryngology, and chest surgery. Conservative management is proposed as the damage control strategy in laryngotracheal trauma.