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Paediatric tracheostomy: Sheffield Experience 1979–1999
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2002
Year
Paediatric TracheostomyInterventional PulmonologyOtolaryngologyPediatricsSheffield ChildrenPast 20TonsillectomyThoracic SurgeryPediatric SurgerySurgerySubglottic StenosisPediatric Lung DiseaseMedicineTracheobronchitis
We have reviewed our experience of tracheostomy in children over the past 20 years at Sheffield Children's Hospital. One hundred and forty-eight tracheostomies were performed in 143 children aged one day to 13 years old (average 27 months). Sixty-five per cent of patients were < one year old. The indications for tracheostomy were upper airways' obstruction in 72 per cent, and assisted ventilation/ bronchopulmonary toilet in 28 per cent. The commonest single reason was acquired subglottic stenosis (SGS) in infants, accounting for 25 per cent of tracheostomies (36/143). The complication rate of tracheostomy was 46 per cent, most commonly granulation tissue formation. There were four deaths directly due to the tracheostomy: two accidental decannulations and two obstructions. Eighty-nine children were decannulated under our care. The average time until decannulation was 25 months.