McFarlane C, Denholm S W, Sudlow C L, Moralee S J, Grant I S, Lee A
Department of Anaesthetics and Intensive Care, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh.
Anaesthesia. 1994 Jan;49(1):38-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2044.1994.tb03311.x.
Tracheostomy in patients requiring prolonged artificial ventilation in intensive care is increasingly being performed by a percutaneous dilatational technique, in preference to the standard surgical method. Since its introduction numerous series have reported favourably on its general safety in the short-term, but there have been few reports of longer term follow-up of patients. We present four cases of laryngotracheal stenosis, a previously unreported complication associated with the technique, and discuss the relevance of these to the future practice of percutaneous tracheostomy.