Diagnosis of vocal cord dysfunction in asthma with high resolution dynamic volume computerized tomography of the larynx
Autor: | Garun S. Hamilton, Philip G. Bardin, Cathy Low, Kenneth K. Lau, Marcus Crossett, Peter Holmes, Douglas Buchanan |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Larynx Adult Male endocrine system medicine.medical_specialty Subglottic stenosis Laryngoscopy Vocal Cords Diagnosis Differential Adrenal Cortex Hormones medicine Vocal cord dysfunction Humans Expiration Asthma Aged Voice Disorders medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Respiration Endoscopy Middle Aged medicine.disease Tracheal Stenosis Trachea medicine.anatomical_structure Female Radiology business Tomography Spiral Computed |
Zdroj: | Respirology (Carlton, Vic.). 14(8) |
ISSN: | 1440-1843 |
Popis: | Background and objective: Vocal cord dysfunction (VCD) often masquerades as asthma and reports have suggested that up to 30% of patients with asthma may have coexistent VCD. Diagnosis of VCD is difficult, in part because it involves laryngoscopy which has practical constraints, and there is need for rapid non-invasive diagnosis. High speed 320-slice volume CT demonstrates laryngeal function during inspiration and expiration and may be useful in suspected VCD. Methods: Endoscopy and high resolution 320-slice dynamic volume CT were used to examine and compare laryngeal anatomy and movement in a case of subglottic stenosis and in a patient with confirmed VCD. Nine asthmatics with ongoing symptoms and suspected VCD also underwent 320-slice dynamic volume CT. Tracheal and laryngeal anatomy and movement were evaluated and luminal areas were measured. Reductions in vocal cord luminal area >40%, lasting for >70% duration of inspiration/expiration, were judged to be consistent with VCD. Results: Studies of subglottic tracheal stenosis validated anatomical similarities between endoscopy and CT images. Endoscopy and 320-slice volume CT also provided comparable dynamic images in a patient with confirmed VCD. A further nine patients with a history of severe asthma and suspected VCD were studied using CT. Four patients had evidence of VCD and the median reduction of luminal area during expiration was 78.2% (range 48.2–92.5%) compared with 10.4% (range 4.7–30%) in the five patients without VCD. Patients with VCD had no distinguishing clinical characteristics. Conclusions: Dynamic volume CT provided explicit images of the larynx, distinguished function of the vocal cords during the respiratory cycle and could identify putative VCD. The technique will potentially provide a simple, non-invasive investigation to identify laryngeal dysfunction, permitting improved management of asthma. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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