Laryngomalacia is defined as collapse of supraglottic structures during inspiration. It is the most common laryngeal disease of infancy. Laryngomalacia presents in the form of stridor, a high-pitched, musical, vibrating, multiphase inspiratory noise appearing within the first 10 days of life. Signs of severity are present in 10% of cases: poor weight gain (probably the most contributive element), dyspnoea with permanent and severe intercostal or xyphoid retraction, episodes of respiratory distress, obstructive sleep apnoea, and/or episodes of suffocation while feeding or feeding difficulties. The diagnosis is based on systematic office flexible laryngoscopy to confirm laryngomalacia and exclude other causes of supraglottic obstruction. Rigid endoscopy under general anaesthesia is only performed in the following cases: absence of laryngomalacia on flexible laryngoscopy, presence of laryngomalacia with signs of severity, search for any associated lesions prior to surgery, discrepancy between the severity of symptoms and the appearance on flexible laryngoscopy, and/or atypical symptoms (mostly aspirations). The work-up must be adapted to each child; however, guidelines recommend objective respiratory investigations in infants presenting signs of severity.
Active endoscopic treatment until complete remission led to a higher-than-expected complete remission rate on intermediate-term to long-term follow-up, with or without relapse. Transient relapse was associated with a long delay in initiating cidofovir treatment.
The effectiveness of intralesional cidofovir therapy in adult-onset recurrent respiratory papillomatosis was impressive. Once obtained, complete remission was stable on intermediate or long-term follow-up. The concentration and the interval between injections seemed to influence the number of injections necessary to achieve remission.
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