1. Esophageal Cancer, Central Airway Obstruction, and Lots More: A Collaborative Approach to a Challenging Scenario
- Author
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Naveen Dutt, Ram Niwas, Nishant Kumar Chauhan, and Gopal Chawla
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute hypercapnic respiratory failure ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stent ,Case Report ,Esophageal cancer ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Tumor Debulking ,Oral submucous fibrosis ,Palliative radiotherapy ,medicine ,Central airway ,business ,Flexible bronchoscopy - Abstract
Esophageal cancer is the most common cause of extrapulmonary malignant central airway obstruction (MCAO). MCAO is usually managed by a multidisciplinary approach involving tumor debulking, stent placement, and palliative radiotherapy. MCAO is a challenge in itself; here, it becomes even more challenging as it was accompanied by grade 3 oral submucous fibrosis, nasal synechiae, and multiple enlarged cervical nodes causing excessive compression of the trachea along with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure. Herein, a 65-year-old woman with multiple challenges, where death was imminent, managed with a collaborative approach involving awake nasal intubation in the sitting position and placement of a stent via a flexible bronchoscope, as rigid bronchoscopy was not possible in view of limited mouth opening. Overcoming these challenges led to completing the procedure successfully and palliating the symptoms.
- Published
- 2021
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