Children (Dec 2021)

Selective Bronchial Occlusion for Treatment of a Bronchopleural Fistula in an Extremely Preterm Infant

  • Giacomo Simeone Amelio,
  • Mariarosa Colnaghi,
  • Silvia Gulden,
  • Genny Raffaeli,
  • Valeria Cortesi,
  • Ilaria Amodeo,
  • Giacomo Cavallaro,
  • Fabio Mosca,
  • Stefano Ghirardello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children8121208
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. 1208

Abstract

Read online

Neonatal pulmonary air leak commonly occurs as a complication of mechanical ventilation in infants with underlying hyaline membrane disease. They can commonly be managed conservatively or with the application of a chest drain, but some severe cases pose a significant challenge in finding an alternative therapeutic solution. Selective bronchial occlusion represents an unconventional rescue therapy for treating bronchopleural fistula resistant to the standard therapy. A 27-week gestation preterm infant ventilated for respiratory distress syndrome developed tension right-sided pneumothorax. Conventional modalities of treatment were tried and were unsuccessful. Intermittent selective bronchial occlusion with a Fogarty’s catheter and high-frequency oscillatory ventilation resulted in considerable improvement in the infant’s clinical condition and radiographic findings.

Keywords