DEV ENVIRONMENT — dev.library.globalcastmd.com — Changes here do not affect production
29 views 0 likes

Dr. CCHMC Pediatric Surgery

GCMD Space · View profile →

QUAD #5 Pharyngeal Scar Management with Dr. Doug von Allmen

Video Published 2024-03-27 Updated 2024-03-27

Timestops (10)

Topic Overview

Pediatric ENT surgeon discusses surgical management of pharyngeal stenosis following caustic lye ingestion, including scar band release, modified suprastomal stenting techniques, and staged reconstruction approaches. Case demonstrates challenges in restoring swallowing, breathing, and airway patency in severe caustic injuries with long-term tracheostomy and G-tube dependence.

Key Takeaways

  • Caustic pharyngeal stenosis requires addressing physical obstruction, altered sensation, and motor dysfunction—not just anatomic patency.
  • Prolonged stenting (4-6 weeks) with modified suprastomal stents wrapped in Silastic sheeting can prevent rescarring after scar band release.
  • Staged Z-plasty or rotational flaps help break up scar orientation; avoid creating new circumferential scarring in single procedures.
  • Many caustic ingestion patients remain tracheostomy/G-tube dependent long-term despite intervention; aspiration management is critical.
  • Long-term surveillance for malignancy is indicated in caustic pharyngeal injury patients due to increased neoplasm risk.

Keywords

Hashtags

Transcript

Comments

Loading comments…