Epiglottitis
| Anesthetic relevance |
High |
|---|---|
| Anesthetic management |
Inhalational induction to maintain spontaneous respirations; Immediate securement of the patient's airway in the operating room due to high risk for critical airway obstruction |
| Specialty |
ENT |
| Signs and symptoms |
- The 4 "D's": dyspnea, dysphagia, drooling, dysphonia - typically presents in children age 2-5 years - Fever as high as 40 degreees Celcius |
| Diagnosis |
Clinical suspicion; "thumb print" sign on lateral neck X-ray |
| Treatment |
Emergent securement of the airway, subsequent antibiotics and steroids |
| Article quality | |
| Editor rating | |
| User likes | 0 |
Epiglottitis is inflammation of the epiglottis typically secondary to an infectious process. The most common causative bacterium historically was Haemophilus influenzae type B. However, with the advancement of vaccination, other causative agents such as Streptococcus pneumoniae or viruses are now more common.
Traditionally, children ages 2-5 years of age were most likely to present with epiglottitis. However, older children and adults may also be afflicted.
Anesthetic implications
Preoperative optimization
Intraoperative management
Postoperative management
Related surgical procedures
Pathophysiology
Signs and symptoms
Diagnosis
Treatment
Medication
Surgery
Prognosis
Epidemiology
References
Top contributors: Olivia Sonderman and Mitchel DeVita