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    Temporary tracheotomy in the surgical treatment of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome: personal experience.

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    Aim of the study is a retrospective analysis on the use of temporary tracheotomy in our snoring surgery experience. From September 1996 to April 2002, 1103 snoring surgery procedures have been carried out on various sites of the upper airways in 530 patients (mean age 50 years, 81% males) prevalently related to severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndromes (33%). Of these patients, 472 (89%) were operated upon under general anaesthesia, whereas 58 (11%) received local anaesthesia. Of the 472 patients operated upon under general anaesthesia, 17 (3.6%) underwent temporary tracheotomy, which in 10 (2.1%) were programmed and only in 7 (1.5%) were non-programmed, having been performed in 2 cases in an emergency setting, in 3 cases in an urgency setting due to respiratory obstruction immediately after removal of intubation and in 2 cases in conditions of urgency, due to respiratory obstruction occurring during post-operative hospitalisation (both performed within 6 hours of regaining consciousness). The only complication observed was a brief laryngeal diplegia, a complication, moreover, not reported in the literature. No criteria exist concerning indications for temporary tracheotomy programmed according to the type of surgery on the hypopharynx; personal experience reveals that: a) temporary tracheotomy is frequently necessary after genioglossus advancement (3/10 operated upon for genioglossus advancement not associated with a programmed temporary tracheotomy); b) temporary tracheotomy is rarely necessary after hyoid suspension (1/98 patients being submitted to hyoid suspension not associated with programmed temporary tracheotomy). Temporary tracheotomy should, in our opinion, be taken into consideration in snoring surgery techniques, particularly in the presence of the not infrequent urgency or emergency situations occurring in patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndromes. With the use of temporary tracheotomy, no deaths occurred in the present study population

    Role of skin-lined tracheotomy in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome: personal experience

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    Permanent tracheotomy was the first surgical procedure proposed for the treatment of severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome and is still the only surgical option that ensures, even in very severe cases, complete elimination of apnoea and, in turn, clinical remission. Improved knowledge of the causes of obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes and the increasing therapeutic options (instrumental, medical and surgical) have resulted in cases requiring tracheotomy as the only indispensable therapeutic option becoming more rare. At present, the only indications are in very occasional conditions of life-threatening obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes and in patients on whom continuous positive airway pressure is not tolerated or is not effective (severe deoxygenation or hypercapnia, severe respiratory disorder index, severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome-related arrhythmias, severe excessive daytime sleepiness, heart diseases or ischaemic encephalopathy exacerbated by obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes, obstructive pneumopathy exacerbated by obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes, severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes with few chances of resolution with other surgical procedures or failure of the latter). Moreover, it is the only therapeutic solution in rare nocturnal laryngeal stridor due to multisystemic atrophy (in which obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome is due to nocturnal laryngospasm of neurologic origin). Therapeutic tracheotomy must be permanent (tracheostomy) and, therefore, preferably carried out with a specific technique (skin-lined tracheotomy), able to guarantee greater stability, less risk of granulation tissue, wider opening of the tracheostomy, sufficient reversibility. In our experience, very few patients (10 cases) withsleep disorder breathing have been submitted to skin-lined tracheotomy. Of these, the majority were submitted to surgery for severe apnoea due to nocturnal laryngospasm on account of multisystemic atrophy (n = 7), while only 3 cases of obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes were submitted to skin-lined tracheotomy, i.e., 0.7% of the 424 patients operated on for obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome and 1.7% of the 175 operated on for severe, or very severe, obstructive sleep apnoea syndromes (RDI > 40). Skin-lined tracheotomy was not followed by important complications and expected results were achieved with immediate disappearance of daytime symptoms and considerable improvement in nocturnal apnoea. Besides sleep-related disorders, numerous clinical situations with indications for a permanent tracheotomy may benefit from the skinlined technique, such as severe laryngeal or tracheal stenoses, laryngeal diplegias, miasthenia gravis, lateral amyotrophic sclerosis, intractable aspiration, severe emphysema
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