Upper aerodigestive tract neoplasms surgery results in important trauma, including swelling (oedemas) that can lead to respiratory tract obstruction and death from suffocation. To prevent this, protective tracheostomy is performed, allowing patients to breathe through a cannula during the critical phase. Although tracheostomy is reassuring, it presents complications, including swallowing disorders, refeeding delay and pulmonary infections. It generates anxiety for patients and can prevent them from communicating, which can affect their psychological well-being during hospitalization. In Sainte Musse Hospital, patients who undergo upper aerodigestive tract neoplasms surgery are continuously monitored in intensive care unit. For some "at risk" patients, tracheostomy preparation is performed during operation with tracheal exposure but no incision. If dyspnea occurs, reanimators can quickly access to trachea and proceed to tracheostomy completion. This method, called PREPA-TRACH, avoids unnecessary tracheostomies while minimizing risks for the patients who would need it. Study purpose is to assess the security and reliability of this PREPA-TRACH protocol.
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Tracheostomy completion rate
Timeframe: Up to 3 hours