Ventilation failure with elective tracheostomy during oral cancer surgery: a case of tracheal diverticulum.
Sandipta MitraAnup SinghSaurabh VigSanjay Kumar MeenaPublished in: BMJ case reports (2023)
Tracheal diverticulum is usually detected incidentally. Rarely, it may lead to difficulty in securing the airway intraoperatively. Our patient underwent oncological resection under general anaesthesia for advanced oral cancer. Elective tracheostomy was performed at the end of the surgery, and a cuffed tracheostomy tube (T-tube) of 7.5 mm size was inserted through the tracheostoma. Despite repeated attempts at T-tube insertion, ventilation could not be established. However, on advancing the endotracheal tube beyond tracheostoma, ventilation was restored. The T-tube was inserted into the trachea under fibreoptic guidance achieving successful ventilation. A fibreoptic bronchoscopy through the tracheostoma performed after decannulation revealed a mucosalised diverticulum extending behind the posterior wall of the trachea. The bottom of the diverticulum showed mucosa-lined cartilaginous ridge with differentiation into smaller bronchiole-like structures. Tracheal diverticulum should be considered as a possible differential in case of failed ventilation following an otherwise uneventful tracheostomy.
Keyphrases
- mechanical ventilation
- respiratory failure
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- intensive care unit
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- patients undergoing
- single cell
- case report
- prostate cancer
- rectal cancer
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- robot assisted
- mass spectrometry
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- acute coronary syndrome