Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Pathophysiology
primary and secondary issues associated with BOAS
Primary:
- Stenotic nares
- Elongated soft palate
- Hypoplastic trachea
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Secondary:
- Everted laryngeal saccules
- Tonsillar eversion
- Laryngeal Collapse
why are brachycephalics more susceptible to hiatal hernias? what outward clinical signs can be associated? significance?
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Possible GI signs
GI signs - regurgitation or vomiting
> Hiatal hernia
> Aerophagia
> Pyloric outflow
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome
-Pathophysiology of how laryngeal edema can arise
stages of laryngeal collapse
Stage I:
Eversion of laryngeal saccules without paradoxical collapse or corniculate or cuneiform processes
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Stage II:
Medial displacement of the cuneiform processes during inspiration
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Stage III:
Collapse or the corniculate processes with loss of the dorsal arch of the rim
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome
-Emergency Management
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Which components can be addressed surgically? which cannot?
Can be addressed surgically:
- Elongated soft palate
- Stenotic nares
- Everted laryngeal saccules
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Cannot be:
- Hypoplastic trachea
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- Laryngeal collapse?- dont want it to get to this point
- difficult as complete tracheostomy is the only option
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Respiratory signs
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome
-Diagnosis
Sedated / light plane of anesthesia airway exam
> no need to do this unless planning surgery
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Intubate
+/- Bloodwork
Thoracic radiographs
Head CT
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome
-Surgical management
- who is a candidate?
- risks?
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome
- surgical approach
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Stenotic nares
Should I address stenotic nares at the time of OVH / neuter?
> wont necessarily hurt, but not going to save it from further surgery down the road… this is not the only component of BOAS, so wont necessarily be effective
surgical correction techniques for stenotic nares, considerations
should we do a tonsilectomy for BOAS cases? why?
amit does it for most cases - any tissue that could get sucked into airway could be an issue
-Elongated soft palate
- how do we surgically correct this?
Traditional landmark:
- Soft palate should not extend beyond tip of epiglottis
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“cut the palate to the tip of the epiglottis” - is what we see in textbooks, but this can be hard to see with intubation
- amit has realized that this palate needs to be totally open…
> we need to be very very aggressive > you cannot take to much of it!!!!
- the cranial aspect of the tonsil is a fair place to take it to
Staphylectomy procedure
Folded Flap Palatoplasty
- how to perform
- complications
-Everted laryngeal saccules
- are secondary to what? what is this?
-Everted laryngeal saccules: how to fix surgically
when to extubate brachycephalics?
make sure they wide awake before you pull the tube!
Brachycephalic Obstructive Airway Syndrome -Postoperative treatment
brachycephalic felines - what is the main airway issue?
Stenotic nares appears to be the only component of BOAS
BOAS in felines solution
vestibuloplasty has worked out well
> they only have stenotic nares as the adverse component