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MRI of the upper airways in children and young adults: the MUSIC study

Authors :
Bas Pullens
Bernadette B L J Elders
Pierluigi Ciet
Wytse B. van den Bosch
Harm A.W.M. Tiddens
Piotr A. Wielopolski
Radiology & Nuclear Medicine
Pediatrics
Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery
Source :
Thorax, 76(1), 44-52. BMJ Publishing Group, Thorax
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

RationalePaediatric laryngotracheal stenosis (LTS) is often successfully corrected with open airway surgery. However, respiratory and vocal sequelae frequently remain. Clinical care and surgical interventions could be improved with better understanding of these sequelae.ObjectiveThe objective of this cross-sectional study was to develop an upper airway MRI protocol to obtain information on anatomical and functional sequelae post-LTS repair.MethodsForty-eight patients (age 14.4 (range 7.5–30.7) years) and 11 healthy volunteers (15.9 (8.2–28.8) years) were included. Spirometry and static and dynamic upper airway MRI (3.0 T, 30 min protocol) were conducted. Analysis included assessment of postoperative anatomy and airway lumen measurements during static and dynamic (inspiration and phonation) acquisitions.Main resultsGood image quality without artefacts was achieved for static and dynamic images in the majority of MRIs. MRI showed vocal cord thickening in 80.9% of patients and compared with volunteers, a significant decrease in vocal cord lumen area (22.0 (IQR 17.7–30.3) mm2 vs 35.1 (21.2–54.7) mm2, p=0.03) but not cricoid lumen area (62.3±27.0 mm2 vs 66.2±34.8 mm2, p=0.70). Furthermore, 53.2% of patients had an A-frame deformation at site of previous tracheal cannula, showing lumen collapse during inspiration. Dynamic imaging showed incomplete vocal cord abduction during inspiration in 42.6% and incomplete adduction during phonation in 61.7% of patients.ConclusionsStatic and dynamic MRI is an excellent modality to non-invasively image anatomy, tissue characteristics and vocal cord dynamics of the upper airways. MRI-derived knowledge on postsurgical LTS sequelae might be used to improve surgery.

Details

ISSN :
14683296 and 00406376
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thorax
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33ac068d7c80465dc2baf07f4351403e