School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, UK.
Laryngoscope. 2012 Jan;122(1):30-7. doi: 10.1002/lary.22453.
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: To gather qualitative and semiquantitative information about catastrophic complications during and following tracheotomy.
National survey distributed to American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery members via the Academy weekly email newsletter during April and May 2011.
A total of 478 respondents provided estimates of the number of four specific tracheotomy-related complications (innominate artery fistula, esophageal fistula, acute tracheotomy occlusion, and obstructing granuloma), all catastrophic events, and events resulting in death or permanent disability encountered during their careers. There were 253 respondents who provided 405 free-text descriptions of specific events.
The respondents experienced approximately one catastrophic event every 10 years and one event resulting in death or permanent disability every 20 years. More than 90% occurred more than 1 week after surgery. Categories of physicians who experienced more events per year included academic physicians and laryngologists. Pediatric otolaryngologists had twice as many innominate artery fistulas per year of practice as others. Qualitative (free-text) descriptions of the most serious events demonstrated that more of these events involved loss of airway and volume bleeds, usually from innominate or carotid artery erosion. Many of the events due to airway loss involved potentially correctable deficits in family education, nursing care, home care, and other structural factors.
Even when we allow for selection bias, these data suggest that a substantial number of tracheotomy complications leading to death or permanent disability occur at a national level. The vast majority of events occur more than 1 week after the procedure. Many of the described events were caused by factors that should be amenable to prospective system improvement strategies.
目的/假设:收集气管切开术中和术后灾难性并发症的定性和半定量信息。
2011 年 4 月至 5 月,通过美国耳鼻喉科学会每周电子邮件时事通讯向该学会成员分发全国性调查。
共有 478 名受访者对四种特定气管切开相关并发症(无名动脉瘘、食管瘘、急性气管切开闭塞和阻塞性肉芽肿)、所有灾难性事件以及在职业生涯中发生的导致死亡或永久性残疾的事件的数量进行了估计。有 253 名受访者提供了 405 个特定事件的自由文本描述。
受访者每 10 年经历一次灾难性事件,每 20 年经历一次导致死亡或永久性残疾的事件。超过 90%的事件发生在手术后 1 周以上。每年经历更多事件的医生类别包括学术医生和喉科医生。儿科耳鼻喉科医生每年发生无名动脉瘘的次数是其他医生的两倍。对最严重事件的定性(自由文本)描述表明,这些事件中有更多的事件涉及气道丧失和大量出血,通常是无名动脉或颈动脉侵蚀所致。许多因气道丧失而导致的事件涉及家庭教育、护理、家庭护理和其他结构因素方面潜在可纠正的缺陷。
即使我们考虑到选择偏差,这些数据表明,导致死亡或永久性残疾的大量气管切开并发症在全国范围内发生。绝大多数事件发生在手术后 1 周以上。许多描述的事件是由应该能够适应前瞻性系统改进策略的因素引起的。