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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Stenting therapy for stenosing airway disease.

Hojoong Kim
- 01 Dec 1998 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 4, pp 221-228
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TLDR
Stenting is one of many effective therapeutic modalities for stenosing central airway disease and careful patient selection, experiences, and continuous development of new technology will bring better results.
Abstract
Stenosing airway disease is classified as intraluminal obstruction, extrinsic compression, and malacia by the anatomical site of the lesion. Stenting therapy is indicated for symptomatic relief of life-threatening dyspnea caused by the last two types. Airway stents are made with metal mesh and/or silicone rubber, and currently more than 20 kinds of stent are available. The metal stent (e.g. Gianturco stent, Wallstent) is easy to insert, may not need general anesthesia, and has wider internal lumen. Because it is very hard to reposition or remove, it is mainly used in malignant airway obstruction. Among many kinds of silicone stent, the Dumon stent is most widely used for benign and malignant airway stenoses, but general anesthesia and rigid bronchoscopy are needed for insertion. It can be removed when the stenosing airway disease subsides completely. In many clinical studies, most patients (85-90%) improved immediately after stenting, and procedure-related mortality is low (< 3%) in experienced centers. Stent displacement, mucus impaction, and granulation tissue formation are potential complications. Stenting is one of many effective therapeutic modalities for stenosing central airway disease. Careful patient selection, experiences, and continuous development of new technology will bring better results.

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Citations
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Patterns of management of congenital tracheal stenosis

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Rigid bronchoscopic intervention in patients with respiratory failure caused by malignant central airway obstruction.

TL;DR: These data show that rigid bronchoscopic intervention in critically ill patients with malignant central airway obstruction may be temporarily life-saving and, in some patients, may serve as a “bridge” to allow time for additional therapies for longer survival.
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Use of silicone stents for the management of post-tuberculosis tracheobronchial stenosis

TL;DR: Bronchoscopic intervention, including silicone stenting, could be a useful and safe method for treating post-tuberculosis tracheobronchial stenosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Dedicated Tracheobronchial Stent

Jean-François Dumon
- 01 Feb 1990 - 
TL;DR: A dedicated tracheobronchial stent to be used in the treatment of external compression of the main airway is described, made of molded silicone and bearing regularly placed studs to prevent displacement.
Journal ArticleDOI

T-tube tracheal stent.

TL;DR: The new T-tube is a flexible onepiece unit made from silicone rubber † (Fig 1) and has been used as a stent after reconstruction of the cervical trachea.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tracheobronchial tree: expandable metallic stents used in experimental and clinical applications. Work in progress.

TL;DR: An expandable stainless steel stent was formulated for use in the treatment of tracheobronchial stenosis, tracheomalacia, and airway collapse following tracheal reconstruction and may be effective in overcoming stenosis caused by scarring, extrinsic compression, and collapse of reconstructed tracheo- bronchial structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silicone stents in the management of benign tracheobronchial stenoses. Tolerance and early results in 63 patients

TL;DR: The Dumon tracheobronchial stents are effective in the maintenance of airway patency and are associated with good tolerance and infrequent complications that are rarely life-threatening as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silicone stents in the management of inoperable tracheobronchial stenoses. Indications and limitations.

TL;DR: The silicone stents designed by Dumon are easily inserted and removed; they are also well tolerated and very efficacious in relieving respiratory symptoms caused by extrinsic airway compression as discussed by the authors.
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