1 / 48

Airway Obstruction Type - Procedure

Trachealstenosis Bronchoscopical Stenting F. Stanzel Asklepios Clinics Munich-Gauting Germany (Director: Prof. Dr. K. Haeussinger). Airway Obstruction Type - Procedure. Typ Resection Afterloading Stent (Laser,...) +++ Ø Ø

zihna
Télécharger la présentation

Airway Obstruction Type - Procedure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TrachealstenosisBronchoscopicalStentingF. StanzelAsklepios Clinics Munich-GautingGermany(Director: Prof. Dr. K. Haeussinger)

  2. Airway ObstructionType - Procedure TypResectionAfterloading Stent(Laser,...) +++ Ø Ø ++ ++ + Ø + +++ Ø Ø +++ intraluminal mixed extraluminal Malacia

  3. Stents - Indications • Airway obstruction by • extrabronchial compression • submucosal tumour growth • endoluminal growth after resection with relevant stenosis or repetitiv obstruction • scar stenosis, complex stenosis • Loss of stability • benign (malacia) or malignant • Sealing of fistula

  4. Decision-makingBronchoscopy vs Surgery

  5. Lung cancer Facts • 20 up to 30 % of lung cancer patients develop • complications (atelectasis, pneumonia) • symptoms (dyspnea, hemoptysis) • in endotracheal/-bronchial involvement • up to 40 % of deaths for loco-regional central involvement • treatment of central airway obstruction decisive in palliation

  6. Stents – Different Types

  7. Stent features adapt. Freitag 2002

  8. Ideal airway stentMost important • inner diameter/wall thickness optimal • expansion force ↑, stable + dynamic, flexible • no migration + removable, manipulable • confectionable (or many sizes) • without secretion problems • without granulation tissue • fluoroscopically/radiologically visible • inexpensive

  9. Airway StentWhich one to choose? • Dumon Stent • Dynamic Stent • others as Polyflex,… • Ultraflex • Alveolus AERO

  10. Dumon Stent • „Dedicated“ airway stent • Straight silicone tube • Studds on surface • to reduce tissue compression • to prevent migration • Great experience • in Europe mostly used • since 1990 • Different length/diameters and Y-Stent available • Radiopaque vs. not visible • Special constructions, manipuliable

  11. Stents – InsertionDumon-Stent

  12. A B C nach M Noppen

  13. Dumon-Stent - Insertion

  14. StentsMark of stenosis edges

  15. Benign Stenosis with Membrane

  16. Malacia – Dumon Stent

  17. Y-Stent (Bifurcation stent)

  18. Dumon silicone stent : the gold standard Proven efficacy in the majority of tracheal, carinal and major bronchial stenoses. - easy to insert and remove - closed surface - relatively non-migratory, non-irritating, non-interfering with clearence, inexpensive - but straight tube, poor thickness/lumen ratio adapted from Noppen

  19. Alternatives • reserve for special situations • “Vergnon“ Silicone Stent • short, benign stenosis • “Noppen“ Tygon Stent • moderate extrinsic compression

  20. Alternativen • Reserve für spezielle Situationen • „Vergnon“ Silicone Stent • short, benign stenosis • „Noppen“ Tygon Stent • moderate extrinsic compression • Polyflex Stent (Polyester wires in Silicon cover) • variable diameters

  21. Dynamic Y Stent (Freitag)

  22. Dynamic Y Stent (Freitag) • Y stent, bifurcation stent • long tracheal branch • similiar to cross section of trachea • horseshoe-like metal buckles • high compression stability • membrane imitation improves mobilization of secretions • 3 sizes

  23. StentinsertionTechniques

  24. Tracheal Stenosis – Y-Stent

  25. Tracheal Stenosis – Y-Stent

  26. Metal Stents (Ultraflex, Wallstent) • thin wall, smooth • high adaptability • with (or without) covering • placement by catheter • simple placement • bad radiological visibility • difficult to remove • expensive

  27. Covered Ultraflex

  28. „Sealing of Fistula“ • curved airway, without stenosis!

  29. Alveolus AERO™ Hybrid Pulmonary Stent • World’s first removable metal tracheobronchial stent • Fully covered, inside-out • Minimizes tumor in-growth and granulation tissue buildup. • Hydrophilic coating minimizes mucus adherence • Advance Removability Feature (suture) • Hybrid Stent • Has characteristics of both metallic and silicone stents

  30. AERO DV™ OTE Pulmonary Delivery Device • Ergonomic single handed device for easy and precise stent delivery over target site. • Allows for direct visualization of proximal and distal ends of stenosis • Removes necessity for fluoroscopy

  31. AERO DV™ OTE Pulmonary Delivery Device

  32. New Metal StentAlveolus

  33. Airway StentsResults • most experience in malignant disease • palliative • in selected patients high benefit • not as the last therapy-option • hardly to compare (pat.selection, stents) • less experience in benign disease • longer survival • more complicated • in combination with other methods • laser resection • dilatation • removable stents, mostly covered or not metal • especially malacia

  34. malignant central airway obstruction no yes life threatening ? flexible bronchoscopy(+ TNM +CPR) rigid bronchoscopy no operable ? symptomatic or< 50% airway Ø ? yes yes no therapeutic endoscopy radiotherapy / chemotherapy surgery endobronchial recurrence adapted from Noppen

  35. adapted from Marquette

  36. AirwaystentsComplications I • Migration • depending on stent type • depending on stenosis type • depending on localization • Secretion retention, Mucostasis • mostly more a problem of the first days • repeated bronchoscopical cleaning up • consequent inhalations

  37. Airway StentsComplications II • Stent obstruction • tumor growth/granulation tissue • interventional therapy • CAVE fire (flammable materials) • only cryotherapy and mechanical removal • Embedding/Perforation • Dumon-Stents; removal, longer stent • Stent defects • stent fractures in Ultraflex (Trachea) • membrane fissures in Freitag-Stents

  38. Metal Stent - Complication

  39. New stent – new complications

  40. An indication for stent removal is often observed (25.6% in this series)!

  41. What's up with stenting? • Significant improvement • dyspnea, other symptoms and QoL • Significant longer survival in selected patients • Significant lung function improvement • Significant impact on therapeutical options

  42. Message • Ever consider surgery, first of all if benign! • Dumon stents are standard for ¾ of patients! • still gold standard • mostly best compromise • Other stents • special situations • 2nd choice! • Stenting with metal stents is easier, but • much more complicated over the long run • much more expensive • Alveolus AERO has a high migration rate! • Stenting is in flux, get the improvements

  43. The ideal stent is still not available! Thank you!

More Related