Blog Archive

Αλέξανδρος Γ. Σφακιανάκης

Monday, October 5, 2020

OSAS and upper pharynx surgery: Does basilingual collapsus always rhyme with failure?

OSAS and upper pharynx surgery: Does basilingual collapsus always rhyme with failure?:

OSAS and upper pharynx surgery: Does basilingual collapsus always rhyme with failure?

Eur Ann Otorhinolaryngol Head Neck Dis. 2020 Sep 30;:

Authors: Baudouin R, Alali A, Hans S, Blumen M, Chabolle F

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Drug-induced-sedation endoscopy (DISE) has proved superior to awake clinical examination for diagnosis of upper-airway obstruction sites and surgical planning. Our question is: does multilevel obstruction on DISE systematically entail failure for surgery limited to the upper pharynx?

MATERIAL & METHODS: We conducted a retrospective single-center study in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) treated by single-level surgery of the upper pharynx (tonsillectomy with or without pharyngoplasty). Preoperative assessment included polysomnography (PSG) and DISE. Surgical efficacy was assessed on postoperative PSG. Treatment response was defined by postoperative apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) <20 events/h with 50% reduction, and cure by AHI <10 (patients with preoperative AHI ≤10 being excluded). Efficacy was compared between groups without (group A) and with basilingual or laryngeal collapsus on DISE (group B).

RESULTS: We analyzed 63 patients, with mean preoperative AHI 33.8±17.9 events/h. The two groups (A, n=36; B, n=27) were clinically comparable. Postoperative PSG took place at a mean 8.5 ± 11.5 months. The success rate was 66.7% in group A (mean reduction in AHI, 57.3±36.2%) and 59.3% in group B (mean reduction, 53.9±39.2%). Cure rates were respectively 48.5% and 48.1%. There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups (P>0.1).

CONCLUSIONS: Oropharyngeal surgery can alleviate associated obstructive sites found on DISE in the lower pharynx, and step-by-step treatment shows efficacy equal to that of single-step multilevel surgery.



PMID: 33011105 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

No comments:

Post a Comment