The objective was to improve the results of treatment of patients with persistent defects of the anterior tracheal wall and soft tissues of the neck.Methods and materials. 220 patients with tracheal cicatrical stenosis were treated, of which 120 patients had defects of the anterior tracheal wall of various sizes. In 70% of cases, PCT was postintubation/posttracheostomy. Men predominated – 89 (74.2 %), women – 31 (25.8 %). After a routine examination, including endoscopic examination, MSCT of the chest with the capture of the cervical region, and general clinical diagnostic methods, all patients underwent surgical treatment.Results. According to the nature of the elimination of the defect of the anterior tracheal wall, patients were divided into several groups. Both local plastic surgery and the elimination of the tracheal defect with the use of microsurgical techniques were used. Circular resection of the trachea with the elimination of the defect was performed in 5 cases. In 2 cases, in the presence of a large persistent defect of more than 6 cm in size, a composite pre-fabricated deltopectoral skin-fascial-cartilage flap was used.Conclusion. The choice of a method for eliminating a persistent open defect of the anterior tracheal wall is determined individually in each case, it depends on its size, the depth of the airway lumen, and the condition of the surrounding tissues. The use of displaced skin-fascial flaps on the vascular pedicle for closing the tracheal defect allows to restore the mucous membrane of the tracheal defect area without using the surrounding scar tissue and close the defect with a second flap without straining the edges of the wound.
The standard and optimized plastic surgery methods on the T-shaped endoprosthesis of the cervical(upper) thoracic trachea are presented. The results were analyzed and compared according to which the proposed method prevents such complications as the formation of a scar tubercle in the stent bed due to the thick scar tissue of the membranous surface of the trachea, the formation of a scar tubercle behind the jugular notch and the formation of a rigid fibrous ring behind the jugular notch of the thoracic partof the trachea. the comparative analysis also showed a shortening of the cannula-bearing period and a reduction in the number of restenoses.Keywords: Cicatricial tracheal stenosis, staged reconstructive plastic surgery, T-shaped stent, tracheal restenosis, post-intubation, post-tracheostomy
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.