1. Severity of clinical manifestations and laryngeal exposure difficulty predicted by glossoptosis endoscopic grades in Robin sequence patients.
- Author
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Manica D, Schweiger C, Sekine L, Fagondes SC, Gasparin M, Levy DS, Kuhl G, Collares MV, and Marostica PJ
- Subjects
- Airway Obstruction physiopathology, Endoscopy, Female, Glossoptosis physiopathology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Laryngoscopy, Male, Pierre Robin Syndrome physiopathology, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Airway Obstruction classification, Glossoptosis classification, Pierre Robin Syndrome classification
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the performance of two glossoptosis airway obstruction classifications in predicting symptom severity and laryngeal exposure difficulty in Robin Sequence (RS) patients., Setting: Public tertiary hospital otolaryngology section (Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre - HCPA)., Patients: All RS patients diagnosed at HCPA from October 2012 to February 2015 were enrolled, a total of 58 individuals. They were classified in isolated RS, RS-Plus and syndromic RS., Intervention: Patients were submitted to sleep endoscopy and a score was attributed according to Yellon and de Sousa by a blinded researcher. Symptom severity evaluation was performed as defined by Cole classification., Main Outcome Measure: Association between endoscopic findings and clinical symptoms severity and laryngeal exposure difficulty., Results: Twenty four patients were identified as isolated RS (41.4%), 19 patients presented as RS-Plus (32.7%) and 15 patients had well defined diagnosed syndromes (25.9%). Concomitant airway anomalies were found in 18 patients (31%). Specifically 17.4% in isolated RS, 55.6% in RS- Plus and 28.6% in the syndromic group had such anomalies (P = 0,03). Probability of presenting severe clinical symptoms as graded by Cole was higher in grade 3 Yellon classification (68.4%, P = 0.012) and in moderate and severe de Sousa classification (61.5% and 62.5%, respectively, P = 0.015) than in milder grades of obstruction. This findings were considered significant even after controlling for patient age. Laryngeal exposure difficulty was correlated with de Sousa and Yellon (Rho = 0,41 and Rho = 0,43, respectively; P < 0,05)., Conclusion: Patients with higher degrees of obstruction in sleep endoscopy had a higher probability of presenting a more severe clinical manifestation and a more difficult laryngeal exposure. Since the number of patients included in this study was small for subgroup analyses, it is not clear if this association is restricted to a specific group of RS., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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