Tracheobronchial Stenosis Medical Slides
Generate publication-quality tracheobronchial stenosis lecture slides in 30 seconds. AI-powered content structured for clinical education.
Generate Tracheobronchial Stenosis DeckWhy teach Tracheobronchial Stenosis?
Tracheobronchial stenosis develops in 10-22% of patients after prolonged intubation and 1-2% after tracheostomy, making post-intubation stenosis the most common benign cause. Malignant central airway obstruction affects approximately 30% of lung cancer patients during their disease course. Interventional pulmonology offers multiple therapeutic modalities including bronchoscopic dilation, stenting, laser therapy, and cryotherapy, with the choice guided by stenosis etiology, location, and morphology.
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Tracheobronchial Stenosis Presentation FAQ
How should the stent selection algorithm be presented?
Present the decision framework: Benign stenosis — silicone stent preferred (removable, repositionable, but requires rigid bronchoscopy for placement, can migrate in 10-20%). Avoid uncovered metallic SEMS in benign disease — granulation tissue ingrowth makes removal nearly impossible. Malignant stenosis — covered SEMS acceptable (self-expanding, can be placed via flexible bronchoscopy, immediate airway patency); uncovered SEMS for external compression (allows mucosal incorporation). Hybrid stents (covered metallic) offer intermediate properties. AQuIRE registry data shows stent-related complications in ~30% at 1 year.
What post-intubation stenosis prevention strategies should be taught?
Present the pathogenesis: cuff pressure exceeding mucosal perfusion pressure (>30 cmH2O) causes ischemic injury at the cuff site within 48-72 hours, progressing through inflammation, granulation, and cicatricial stenosis over 3-8 weeks post-extubation. Prevention: maintain cuff pressure 20-30 cmH2O (continuous monitoring preferred), minimize intubation duration, avoid oversized tubes, early tracheostomy in anticipated prolonged ventilation (>14 days per TracMan trial). Symptomatic stenosis develops when lumen narrows >50% — symptoms lag weeks to months after extubation.
How should idiopathic subglottic stenosis be distinguished in teaching?
Present iSGS as a distinct entity: predominantly affects women (95%) aged 20-60, located within 1-2 cm below vocal cords, circumferential cicatricial narrowing, no prior intubation history. Etiology likely involves estrogen and progesterone receptor-mediated fibroblast activation (ER/PR positive in surgical specimens). Management: serial endoscopic dilation ± local steroid injection (triamcinolone 40 mg/mL) — may require 1-3 dilations per year. Cricotracheal resection is definitive but reserved for refractory cases. Distinguish from GPA (check ANCA), sarcoidosis, and relapsing polychondritis.
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