“…A tracheotomy, while providing for a secure airway, brings its load of negative impacts, including increased airway complications, increased health care costs with prolonged hospital stay and the necessity of home nursing and tracheotomy care, as well as increased social and parental burden. All but one of the premature infants with bilateral choanal atresia described in the literature were kept intubated or on an oral airway for a few weeks to let them grow before definitive treatment using a standard transnasal repair was undertaken, prolonging their stay in the intensive care unit [4][5][6][7]. However, the 34-week premature infant treated with Holmium:YAG laser could be treated within a few days of life using this technique, leading to early discharge home [3].…”