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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Posterior Tracheopexy For Severe Tracheomalacia

Video Published 2018-09-16 Updated 2024-02-10

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Topic Overview

Study of 98 patients with severe tracheomalacia treated with posterior tracheopexy, a technique suturing the posterior tracheal wall to the spine's anterior longitudinal ligament. Most patients (88%) had esophageal atresia history. Clinical symptoms improved significantly, emphasizing the need for systematic bronchoscopic evaluation to distinguish posterior collapse from anterior compression.

Key Takeaways

  • Posterior tracheopexy addresses severe tracheomalacia from posterior membranous intrusion by suturing trachea to anterior spinal ligament.
  • 88% of patients had esophageal atresia history; clinical symptoms (cough, infections, noisy breathing) improved post-operatively.
  • Bronchoscopy is essential to distinguish anterior (aortic) vs posterior collapse—20% of patients required both aortopexy and tracheopexy.
  • Tracheomalacia is heterogeneous; systematic bronchoscopic evaluation guides tailored surgical approach (anterior, posterior, or combined).
  • Exercise tolerance showed trend toward improvement but did not reach statistical significance in this 98-patient cohort.

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