2.ent Emergencies
2.ent Emergencies
2.ent Emergencies
Airway obstruction
• Stridor
- an indication airway calibre significantly
reduce
- noisy breath
- symptom not a disease
• Stertor
- low-pitched ,snoring type sound
generated at the level of the nasopharynx &
oropharynx
Characteristic of stridor
• Inspiratory
- Obstruction at or above vocal cords
• Expiratory
- Lower respiratory tract
• Biphasic
- Severe obstruction
-Obstruction at trachea or main bronchi
Grading of severity of airway obstruction
• Grade - 1 -
inspiratory stridor only
• Grade – 2 -
biphasic stridor
• Grade -3 -
biphasic with ↑ respiratory effort
• Grade – 4 -
cyanosis,↓ LOC
Stridor
• Allergy – Angioedema
• Inflammatory – epiglottitis, laryngitis
• Neoplasia – benign/ malignant
• Trauma – thermal, chemical, blunt, sharp,
iatrogenic, foreign body
Managment
• Immediately asses the severity of the
obstruction
• Establish emergency airway if require
• Supplement oxygen
• Further management depend on the cause of
the condition
Angioedema
Presentation
acute painless mucosal edema (face
tongue,lips and larynx)
airway obstruction 20%
Aetiology
ACE inhibitor sensitivity most common
Treatment : aggressive
Secure airway (obs, ET or intubation )
D/C ACE inhibitor
Steroid , antihistamine
Foreign bodies
Pharyngooesophagus
FOREIGN-BODY (FB) ASPIRATION
• Peak incidence age 1 to 3 years
– 90% of cases under age 4
• Most commonly foods or toys
– Foods- peanuts, grapes, and hot dogs
– Vegetable matter can cause intense pneumonitis
and subsequent pneumonia
– Toys/objects- typically small, smooth, and round
FOREIGN-BODY (FB) ASPIRATION
• In the pharynx , the commonest sites of
impaction
- tonsil & base of tongue account 50%
- valleculla and
priform fossa 5 %
• In the oesophagus
- most lodge at cricopharyngeus ( C5- C6)
- Aortic arch and left mainstem bronchus
FOREIGN-BODY (FB) ASPIRATION
• Signs & Symptoms
– Majority with abrupt onset of stridor or
respiratory distress or failure
– Classically, but not always, laryngotracheal FB
cause stridor and bronchial FB cause wheeze
– Some may be asymptomatic and normal P.E.
– FB should be suspected in unilateral wheeze
FOREIGN BODY
• What next if you cannot see it?
• Option 1 – refer
• Option 2 – X-ray. May/may not show the bone
• Option 3 – You are convinced the bone is still
impacted (feeling has not got better / has got
worse) - EUA
FOREIGN BODY
Patient has swallowed a fish bone which has stuck in
the throat
What is the first step in management?
Get the patient to try and localise by pointing to where
they feel the bone. Try and see it
What next if you can see it?
Spray throat with topical LA. Use an anaesthetic laryngoscope to
depress the tongue and a suitable forceps to try and grasp it and
remove it
What do you do if you cannot remove it?
Option 1 – refer
Option 2 - EUA and look for it and remove it
Foreign Body
This time the patient has swallowed a more substantial FB
(eg. Piece of bone/lump of half chewed meat) and it has stuck
in the throat
Where would such a FB usually impact?
Cricopharyngeal sphincter. The next site for impaction is
the mid-third of the oesophagus behind the heart and after
that at the gastro-oesophageal junction
What is a complication of oesophageal impaction of a FB?
Pinna
Inner Ear
• Common problem
• children at school age
• Adults: cotton wool
• Types
1- organic: seeds, pieces of papers
2- Non organic: beads, stone
3- Insects
Clinical Features
• Ear pain and discharge
• Deafness
• Otitis Externa if organic
• Asymptomatic inorganic
• OTOSCOPY easy to diagnose
FOREIGN BODY IN THE
EAR
• Dealing with foreign body
- Take a good history
. Nature
. Shape
. Size
- First attempt is likely to be the most
successful -
Remove organic FB within 24hrs -
Inorganic can be removed next day
Management
• Technique
- Syringing
. 90 % case sucussefull
. Avoid in organic substance
- Spirts kill insects
- Under Microscope
. Suction , Ear hook, Jobson probe
.
Childern under GA
when to referal to ENT?
- Attempt of removal felt
- Type of foreign body
. Batteries disc
. Spherical & Sharp edge
. Vegetable matters
- Patient profile
. Age < 4
. Agitated child
- Poorly visualized foreign body
Epistaxis: easy vs. difficult
EPISTAXIS (NOSE BLEEDS)
• IN CHILDREN
– Usually bleed from Little’s area (Ant. Bleed)
– May be associated with
• URTI
• Rhinitis (e.g. Hay fever)
• Nose picking (digital trauma)
• Foreign body (foul discharge)
NOSE BLEEDS IN ADULTS
• Adults:
– Anterior bleed
• Little’s area
• Recurrent,
• self-limiting
– Posterior bleed
• Elderly
• Medical comorbidities (hypertension, aspirin, warfarin)
• More severe than anterior bleed
• consider nasal packing if can’t stop it
• Remember ABC –call for help quickly
Little’s area- anterior bleed from septum
HOW TO STOP A NOSE BLEED
ACUTE MANAGEMENT
- Nose blowing
- Oral positive pressure
technique -
Instrumentation
- Balloon catheter
Complication of sinusitis
Complication of sinusitis