Tracheomalacia


Tracheomalacia is a condition or incident where the cartilage that keeps the airway open is soft such that the trachea partly collapses especially during increased airflow. The usual symptom is stridor when a person breathes out. This is usually known as a collapsed windpipe.
The trachea normally opens slightly during breathing in and narrows slightly during breathing out. These processes are exaggerated in tracheomalacia, leading to airway collapse on breathing out.
If the condition extends further to the large airways , it is termed tracheobronchomalacia. The same condition can also affect the larynx, which is called laryngomalacia. The term is from trachea and the Greek μαλακία, softening

Signs and symptoms

Tracheomalacia occurs when the walls of the trachea collapse. This can happen because the walls of the windpipe are weak, or it can happen because something is pressing on it. The whole windpipe can be affected, or only a short piece of it. If the collapsed part of the windpipe goes past the area where the windpipe branches off into the two lungs, it is called bronchomalacia.
This problem causes noisy or difficult breathing in the first 1 to 2 months after birth. This is called congenital tracheomalacia. It is not very common. Babies born with tracheomalacia may have other health issues like a heart defect, reflux or developmental delay. Some children get tracheomalacia because of other health issues. Symptoms can be mild to severe.
Symptoms
Inside the lung
Noisy breathing that may get better when you change your baby's position or while he or she is asleep.
Breathing problems that get worse during coughing, crying, feeding or colds.
High-pitched sound during breathing.
High-pitched cough.
Rattling noise or wheezing with breathing.

Diagnosis

Classifications

There are three types of tracheomalacia:
Life is usually saved if the airway is opened via a hole in the throat. If a person survives, they may have symptoms, but usually will get better after the airway is reopened. If the symptoms are severe enough, treatment may be needed. These range from medical management over mechanical ventilation, or bi-level positive airway pressure to tracheal stenting and surgery.
Surgical techniques include aortopexy, tracheopexy, tracheobronchoplasty, and tracheostomy. The role of the nebulised recombinant human deoxyribonuclease remains inconclusive.

Prognosis

For a total collapse, the survival rate is 2%. For a partial collapse, the survival rate is 45%. Both vary highly on whether the airway is open, or if a hole is cut in the throat. The overall survival rate is 4%. For those that do survive, 98% are alive after 1 year, 79% are alive after 5 years, and 49% are alive after 10 years. Many die from the breathing pattern complications following tracheal collapse if they survive the initial incident. 40% of tracheal collapse survivors do not die from the complications related to tracheal collapse.