Difference between revisions of "Laryngeal papillomatosis removal"

From WikiAnesthesia
(Finished infobox)
(Finished preop section)
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|Airway
|Airway
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| -Stridor at rest (inspiratory vs biphasic)
-Retractions, work of breathing
 
-Voice quality (hoarseness suggests glottic involvement)
 
-Prior tracheostomy
 
-Prior anesthesia records
|-
|-
|Neurologic
|Neurologic
|
| -N/a
|-
|-
|Cardiovascular
|Cardiovascular
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| -Tachycardia from distress
-Exercise intolerance
|-
|-
|Pulmonary
|Pulmonary
|
| -Baseline oxygenation
-Reactive airway disease history
 
-Lower airway involvement
|-
|-
|Gastrointestinal
|Gastrointestinal
|
| -NPO guidelines
-Feeding difficulties
|-
|-
|Hematologic
|Hematologic
|
| -Low bleeding risk
|-
|-
|Renal
|Renal
|
| -N/a
|-
|-
|Endocrine
|Endocrine
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| -N/a
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|Other
|Other
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| -OR precautions to possible viral aerosolization and laser plum (N95, smoke evacuator)
-No isolation precautions outside OR
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|}
===Labs and studies<!-- Describe any important labs or studies. Include reasoning to justify the study and/or interpretation of results in the context of this procedure. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
===Labs and studies<!-- Describe any important labs or studies. Include reasoning to justify the study and/or interpretation of results in the context of this procedure. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
Usually none. Consider imaging if distal airway involvement suspected
===Operating room setup<!-- Describe any unique aspects of operating room preparation. Avoid excessively granular information. Use drug classes instead of specific drugs when appropriate. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
===Operating room setup<!-- Describe any unique aspects of operating room preparation. Avoid excessively granular information. Use drug classes instead of specific drugs when appropriate. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
Airway equipment
* Multiple small ETTs available (consider microcuff for pediatric patients)
* LMA as rescue
* Suction immediately available
* Laser-safe ETT if laser planned
* Backup rigid bronchoscope
* Jet ventilation equipment if used
* Difficult airway cart immediately available
* Tracheostomy equipment if used
Laser precautions (airway fire precautions)
* N95 mask with laser safe eyewear
* Smoke evacuator with ULPA filter
* Laser-safe ETT
* ETT cuff inflated with saline +/- methylene blue
* Saline available on field
* FiO2 < 30%, avoid nitrous
===Patient preparation and premedication<!-- Describe any unique considerations for patient preparation and premedication. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
===Patient preparation and premedication<!-- Describe any unique considerations for patient preparation and premedication. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
* Standard premedication acceptable if minimal obstruction
* Avoid heavy sedation if airway obstruction presents
* Glycopyrrolate may improve visualization
* Dexamethasone to reduce airway edema
===Regional and neuraxial techniques<!-- Describe any potential regional and/or neuraxial techniques which may be used for this case. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
===Regional and neuraxial techniques<!-- Describe any potential regional and/or neuraxial techniques which may be used for this case. If none, this section may be removed. -->===
Not routinely used
* Superior laryngeal nerve block or transtracheal block may be used in rare awake adults cases
* Office-based laser procedures in adults may use topical anesthesia with minimal sedation


==Intraoperative management==
==Intraoperative management==

Revision as of 07:17, 26 February 2026

Laryngeal papillomatosis removal
Anesthesia type

General (Topical/Local in select patients)

Airway

Shared airway ETT (microcuff) or jet ventilation or intermittent apnea

Lines and access

PIV

Monitors

Standard ASA

Primary anesthetic considerations
Preoperative

-Severity of airway obstruction (stridor, retractions) -Voice changes or feeding difficulties -Location and bulk of papillomas -Recent URI -Prior airway history

Intraoperative

-Shared airway with surgeon -Airway bleeding/edema -Airway fire prevention (laser precautions) -Smoke protection (N95, smoke evacuator)

Postoperative

-Laryngospasm risk -Airway edema

Article quality
Editor rating
Unrated
User likes
0

Laryngeal papillomatosis or recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP) is a benign but chronic, recurrent disease caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) types 6 and 11. Lesions most commonly occur on vocal cords but can involve any part of the larynx and occasionally subglottic or tracheal region. Papillomas grow exophytically and interfere with phonation and airway patency.

It affects both children (juvenile-onset) and adults (adult-onset), with more aggressive disease and higher recurrence rates typically see in children. There is no cure and recurrence is common, so patient often require multiple procedures over their lifetime. The goal of surgery is to relieve airway obstruction and improve voice quality.

Overview

Indications

  • Airway obstruction (symptomatic)
  • Voice dysfunction (interfering with communication or quality)
  • Recurrent disease debulking
  • Distal airway spread into subglottic or lower

Urgency ranges from elective to emergent depending on obstruction severity

Surgery is palliative, not curative, and does not remove HPV from the tissue

Surgical procedure

Principles:

  • Preserve healthy mucosa to minimize scarring and voice disruption
  • Avoid overly aggressive resection to reduce webbing and dysphonia

Suspension microlaryngoscopy - surgeon visualizes the larynx with laryngoscope and removes papillomas using:

  • Microdebrider
    • Rotating blade with suction to remove papillomas with minimal manipulation of surrounding tissue
    • Rapidly debulk lesions with shorter operative time and less injury to surrounding tissue than lasers
  • Cold instruments
    • Traditional excision via forceps or scissors
    • Useful for small or focal lesions and biopsy
  • Laser resection
    • CO2 historically used with precision and hemostasis
    • Photoangiolytic lasers (KTP, pulsed dye) more favored with potentially lower scar formation
    • Requires airway fire precautions

Office-based flexible endoscopic laser under topical sedation is possible in cooperative adults with limited disease

Tracheotomy possible in severe, airway-compromising disease unresponsive to repeated microlaryngoscopy, but carries risk of distal viral spread along tracheobronchial tree[1]

Preoperative management

Patient evaluation

System Considerations
Airway -Stridor at rest (inspiratory vs biphasic)

-Retractions, work of breathing

-Voice quality (hoarseness suggests glottic involvement)

-Prior tracheostomy

-Prior anesthesia records

Neurologic -N/a
Cardiovascular -Tachycardia from distress

-Exercise intolerance

Pulmonary -Baseline oxygenation

-Reactive airway disease history

-Lower airway involvement

Gastrointestinal -NPO guidelines

-Feeding difficulties

Hematologic -Low bleeding risk
Renal -N/a
Endocrine -N/a
Other -OR precautions to possible viral aerosolization and laser plum (N95, smoke evacuator)

-No isolation precautions outside OR

Labs and studies

Usually none. Consider imaging if distal airway involvement suspected

Operating room setup

Airway equipment

  • Multiple small ETTs available (consider microcuff for pediatric patients)
  • LMA as rescue
  • Suction immediately available
  • Laser-safe ETT if laser planned
  • Backup rigid bronchoscope
  • Jet ventilation equipment if used
  • Difficult airway cart immediately available
  • Tracheostomy equipment if used

Laser precautions (airway fire precautions)

  • N95 mask with laser safe eyewear
  • Smoke evacuator with ULPA filter
  • Laser-safe ETT
  • ETT cuff inflated with saline +/- methylene blue
  • Saline available on field
  • FiO2 < 30%, avoid nitrous

Patient preparation and premedication

  • Standard premedication acceptable if minimal obstruction
  • Avoid heavy sedation if airway obstruction presents
  • Glycopyrrolate may improve visualization
  • Dexamethasone to reduce airway edema

Regional and neuraxial techniques

Not routinely used

  • Superior laryngeal nerve block or transtracheal block may be used in rare awake adults cases
  • Office-based laser procedures in adults may use topical anesthesia with minimal sedation

Intraoperative management

Monitoring and access

Induction and airway management

Positioning

Maintenance and surgical considerations

Emergence

Postoperative management

Disposition

Pain management

Potential complications

Procedure variants

Variant 1 Variant 2
Unique considerations
Indications
Position
Surgical time
EBL
Postoperative disposition
Pain management
Potential complications

References

  1. Primov-Fever, Adi; Madgar, Ory (2019-12). "Surgery for adult laryngeal papillomatosis". Operative Techniques in Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. 30 (4): 264–268. doi:10.1016/j.otot.2019.09.008. ISSN 1043-1810. Check date values in: |date= (help)