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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Aerodigestive & Esophageal Surgery - Difficult Tracheal Esophageal Fistula

Video Published 2018-11-13 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Expert panel from Cincinnati Children's Hospital discusses complex tracheoesophageal fistulas and aspiration management in pediatric patients. Covers anatomical vs functional causes of aspiration, diagnostic approaches, and surgical interventions including fundoplication and laryngotracheal separation.

Key Takeaways

  • Pediatric aspiration has two main causes: functional/neurological (cerebral palsy, Char syndrome) or anatomical (TEF, laryngeal cleft).
  • Children can aspirate food/drink, saliva, reflux, or esophageal contents—each requires different management strategies.
  • Saliva aspiration management ranges from Robinol medication to Botox, drool procedures, tracheostomy, or laryngotracheal separation.
  • Laryngotracheal separation is the only guaranteed operation to stop aspiration but results in permanent loss of vocalization.
  • Complex aerodigestive cases require multidisciplinary evaluation including otolaryngology, gastroenterology, pulmonology, and surgery.

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