Tracheobronchial anomalies in children may be associated with recurrent episodes of pulmonary infections and symptoms of recurrent or persistent airway obstruction. Diagnosis by conventional imaging may be difficult. Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) offers the possibility to generate a virtual three-dimensional bronchoscopy, thus enabling detailed overview of the tracheobronchial system. We report on a 13-year old boy, admitted to hospital after recurrent episodes of bronchial infections. Functional studies showed airway obstruction with no response to bronchodilators. A chest radiograph was normal. Flexible bronchoscopy revealed tracheobroncho malacia of the distal trachea and the right main bronchus. The ostium of an accessory right-sided tracheal bronchus, which could not be entered by the endoscope, was also detected. MDCT using a low-dose protocol was performed on a four-section scanner (Somatom Volume Zoom, Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). A three-dimensional virtual bronchoscopy based on surface rendering was generated, which confirmed moderate narrowing of the trachea and right main bronchus. Furthermore, an accessory and stenotic tracheal bronchus including poststenotic segments, ventilating parts of the right upper lobe, could be clearly visualized. MDCT can be a valuable instrument in the diagnostic pathway of assessing tracheobronchial anomalies in children, including visualization of poststenotic bronchial structures. The use of low-dose protocols provides adequate image quality to perform virtual bronchoscopy, thus reducing administered radiation to a tolerable amount.
MDCT-guided transbronchial bronchoscopic biopsy is a promising and safe tool for the diagnostic pathway of solitary pulmonary nodules in previously undiagnosed patients. Image quality was sufficient with low-dose protocols, which resulted in low radiation exposure for patients and personnel.
Low-dose CT-guided TLB can be a helpful tool in investigating chronic infectious inflammatory processes in children with minimal radiation exposure. It should be considered prior to any open surgical procedure performed for biopsy alone. In our patient group no significant complication occurred. A disadvantage of the method is that it does not allow smaller airways and vessels to be assessed.
Applying a modified MSCT protocol without gantry angulation and arm elevation can significantly decrease radiation exposure and examination time in multiple trauma patients without relevant loss of diagnostic image information and, consequently, has the potential of improving the diagnostic process and prognosis in multiple trauma patients.
In a new guideline issued by the German Association for the Study of Pain, intrathecal opioid therapy is described as proven to be effective with relatively few side effects. We reviewed this statement by analysis of the available literature and critical evaluation of the clinical course in a few of our own patients (n=3). In these cases (as well as in a further eight patients), explantation and a switch to oral opioids led to distinctly better alleviation of pain and abatement of the unwanted effects. The problems we discuss do not appear to be rare instances, but by all means complications that are frequently described. The long-term efficacy of intrathecal opioids has not been adequately verified; moreover, their potency is not high. The frequency of undesired events is comparable to that of oral opioid medication, but serious neurological complications are possible. To avoid dose escalations and to recognize neurological complications in time, diligent monitoring by the surgeon or an experienced pain center is essential.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.