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Bilateral tension pneumothorax following rigid bronchoscopy: A report of an epignathus in a newborn delivered by the EXIT procedure with a fatal outcome

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2006

R P S Harar
Affiliation:
Departments of Otolaryngology, St Mary’s Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK.
R Pratap
Affiliation:
Departments of Otolaryngology, St Mary’s Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK.
N Chadha
Affiliation:
Departments of Otolaryngology, St Mary’s Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK.
N Tolley
Affiliation:
Departments of Otolaryngology, St Mary’s Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK.

Abstract

We describe a case of a newborn baby with a prenatal diagnosis of an epignathus (oropharyngeal teratoma). With the potential for airway problems at birth, he was delivered by an elective EXIT (Extra Utero Intrapartum Treatment) procedure at 38 weeks of pregnancy. The airway was secured and rigid bronchoscopy performed. Initially he was stable, but developed cardiorespiratory difficulties 40 minutes after birth and died from a cardiac arrest 17 minuteslater. Tension pneumothorax is a devastating complication that can occur with lower airway manipulation for anaesthesia and rigid bronchoscopy. The addition of positive pressure during mechanical ventilation converts the pneumothorax into a tension pneumothorax. The possibility of tension pneumothorax should be entertained in a mechanically ventilated patient whose ventilatory pressures are increasing, with diminishing cardiac output. A complicated case is presented, where the diagnosis was missed with a fatal outcome.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Royal Society of Medicine Press

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