Treatment for postchemoradiotherapy hypopharyngeal stenosis: Pharyngoesophageal bypass using an anterolateral thigh flap—A case report
Autor: | Marcelo Figari, Demetrio Cavadas, Juan José Larrañaga, Luis A Boccalatte, Pedro I. Picco |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Larynx
Leak medicine.medical_specialty medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry 030230 surgery medicine.disease Endoscopy Surgery 03 medical and health sciences Stenosis 0302 clinical medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Swallowing 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis medicine Carcinoma Surgical Flaps business Chemoradiotherapy |
Zdroj: | Microsurgery. 39:543-547 |
ISSN: | 1098-2752 0738-1085 |
Popis: | Radiation-induced pharyngoesophageal stenosis is a frequent and unwanted consequence of nonsurgical treatment of hypopharyngeal carcinomas. Current treatment mainly includes endoscopic dilatations, but a poor response to this modality and/or a severe stenosis may lead to a radical resection (pharyngolaryngectomy) and reconstruction with tubed flaps, which allow oral feeding but fail to preserve speech. In this report, we present a case of radiation-induced hypopharyngeal stenosis treated with a pharyngoesophageal bypass using an anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap with the intention of preserving the larynx. We describe the case of a 59-year-old male with severe pharyngoesophageal stenosis after chemoradiotherapy due to a squamous cell carcinoma, where conventional dilatation treatment failed to restore pharyngoesophageal passage of solids or liquids. Since the patient rejected a pharyngolaryngectomy due the loss of speech entailed, a pharyngoesophageal bypass was performed using an ALT flap. The flap measured 13 × 20 cm, which ensured a 4-cm-diameter tube and enough length to communicate the lateral pharyngeal wall with the cervical esophagus. Endoscopy did not reveal flap failure, and during the immediate postoperative period, the patient had a small cervical leak detected only by imaging that did not affect the skin and resolved with antibiotic treatment. The patient also required a tracheostomy on day 4 and initially had no passage of saliva through the bypass; we attributed this to edema that resolved spontaneously after 1 month with complete liquid and solid passage and laryngeal competence that led to tracheal decannulation. Good functional results were achieved both for speech and swallowing at 5-year follow-up. We believe that this procedure may be considered before performing a pharyngolaryngectomy for the treatment of a persistent benign stenosis in patients with a functional larynx. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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