Abstract We compared the microbiology of middle ear fluid (MEF) in two cohorts of children having ventilation tube (VT) insertion; the first in the era of 7-valent Streptococcus pneumoniae conjugate ...vaccine (PCV7) and the second following introduction of the ten-valent pneumococcal vaccine (PHiD-CV10). Methods During 2011 (Phase 1) and again in 2014 (Phase 2) MEF and NP samples from 325 children and 319 children were taken at the time of VT insertion. A matched comparison group had NP swabs collected with 137 children (Phase 1) and 154 (Phase 2). Culture was performed on all NP and MEF samples with further molecular identification of Haemophilus species, serotyping of S. pneumoniae , and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing on all MEF samples. Results In Phase 2 immunisation coverage with ⩾3 doses of PHiD-CV10 was 93%. The rate and ratios of culture and molecular detection of the 3 main otopathogens was unchanged between Phase 1 and Phase 2 in both MEF and NP. Haemophilus influenzae was cultured in one quarter and detected by PCR in 53% of MEF samples in both time periods. S. pneumoniae and Moraxella catarrhalis were cultured in up to 13% and detected by PCR in 27% and 40% respectively of MEF samples . H. influenzae was the most common organism isolated from NP samples (61%) in the children undergoing VT surgery whilst M. catarrhalis (49%) was the most common in the non-otitis prone group. 19A was the most prominent S. pneumoniae serotype in both MEF and NP samples in Phase 2. Of Haemophilus isolates, 95% were confirmed to be non-typeable H. influenzae (NTHi) over both time periods. Conclusion Following implementation of PHiD-CV10 in New Zealand, there has been no significant change in the 3 major otopathogens in NP or MEF in children with established ear disease. For these children non-typeable H. influenzae remains the dominant otopathogen detected.
Objective
Knowledge of the breastfeeding swallow is limited by practical challenges. Radiation exposure to both mother and infant and the radiolucent properties of breastmilk make videofluoroscopy an ...unsuitable imaging modality. Furthermore, ultrasound is not ideal for capturing the complex 3‐dimensional functional anatomy of swallowing. In this study we explore the feasibility of using real‐time MRI to capture the breastfeeding swallow.
Methods
Prospective observational study: Review of imaging from 12 normal infants (<5 months of age) and their mothers while breastfeeding using real‐time MRI.
Results
Static images were successfully captured in 11 infants and dynamic images in nine infants. This imaging modality confirms the dorsal surface of the infant's tongue elevates the maternal nipple to the hard palate, closing the space around the nipple with no air visible in the oral cavity during sucking and swallowing. We obtained dynamic imaging of mandibular movement with sucking, palatal elevation and pharyngeal constriction with swallowing, diaphragm movement with breathing and milk entering the stomach. Breastmilk was easily visualized, being high intensity on T2 sequences. Technical challenges were encountered secondary to infant movement and difficulties acquiring and maintaining midsagittal orientation. The similarity in tissue densities of the lips, tongue, nipple and hard palate limited definition between these structures.
Conclusion
Real‐time MRI imaging was successful in capturing dynamic images of the breastfeeding swallow. However, technical and practical challenges make real‐time MRI unlikely at present to be suitable for swallow assessment in clinical practice. Advances in technology and expertise in dynamic image capture may improve the feasibility of using MRI to understand and assess the breastfeeding swallow in the near future.
Level of evidence
4.
The breastfeeding swallow is difficult to image and poorly understood. Dynamic MRI imaging has been used to visualize mothers and their infants while breastfeeding, demonstrating the dynamic events occurring during sucking and swallowing.
Abstract Button (Disc) battery impaction in the esophagus is a time critical presentation with significant associated morbidity and mortality. We present the case of a 15-month old boy with an ...unwitnessed foreign body ingestion, and who was subsequently found to have two ingested lithium button batteries, which were lodged at the upper esophagus, distal to cricopharyngeus. We discuss the “macaroon sign” of two button batteries lying parallel to one another, with both positive poles facing each other, as this may be an unusual barrier to urgent identification of the impacted foreign body as batteries. 0.25% acetic acid was used as a neutralising agent at the time of button battery removal (8 h after ingestion), based on published evidence that this effectively decreases tissue pH and mitigates the severity of the injury in animal models, whilst not increasing ambient tissue temperature as once thought 4. Our patient had a significantly better clinical outcome than predicted from the severity of the burn at time of button battery removal, suggesting acetic acid used topically is a safe adjunct treatment of impacted ingested button batteries and may reduce the likelihood of serious long term sequelae.
Abstract Subglottic haemangioma is a rare but potentially life threatening condition which requires intervention. Many different treatments have been described with varying degrees of success and ...complications. Recently, successful treatment with propranolol has been reported in 11 cases of cutaneous haemangiomas and then in two cases of subglottic haemangiomas with extensive cutaneous lesions in conjunction with other treatment modalities. We describe the successful treatment with propranolol, of a stridulous four-month-old child with a 95% obstructing subglottic haemangioma. This was achieved without the need for tracheostomy or any other surgical intervention, and with no reported side effects. We now believe the new discovery of a dramatic response to propranolol allows treatment in the acute setting and following further study may render surgical treatment of subglottic haemangioma obsolete.
Lingual frenotomy has become an increasingly common surgical procedure, performed for a broad range of indications from birth through adulthood. This study utilizes histology to define the structure ...and tissue composition of the lingual frenulum and floor of mouth (FOM) fascia. En bloc specimens of anterior tongue, lingual frenulum, and FOM tissues were harvested from ten embalmed adult cadavers. An additional three fresh tissue cadaveric specimens were frozen with the tongue supported in an elevated position, to enable harvesting and paraffin embedding of the elevated lingual frenulum as a discrete specimen. All 13 specimens were prepared as ten-micron coronal sections using stains to determine the general morphology of the lingual frenulum, its relationship to neighbouring structures (Mason’s Trichrome), presence of elastin fibers (Verhoeff-van Gieson), and collagen typing (Picrosirius Red). Our results have shown a submucosal layer of fascia spanning horizontally across the FOM was present in all specimens, with variability in fascial thickness and histologic composition. This FOM fascia suspends the sublingual glands, vessels, and genioglossus from its deep surface. The elevated lingual frenulum is formed by a central fold of this FOM fascia together with the overlying oral mucosa with variability in fascial thickness and composition. With tongue elevation, the fascia mobilizes to a variable extent into the fold forming the frenulum, providing a structural explanation for the individual variability in lingual frenulum morphology seen in clinical practice.
Inhaled foreign bodies in children are common and may be complicated by secondary airway tract infection. The inhaled foreign body may act as carrier of infectious material and the aim of this study ...was to explore the bacterial species associated with aspirated foreign bodies in a cohort of children.
Retrospective case series of 34 patients who underwent rigid laryngobronchoscopy because of foreign body aspiration. Each patient had a sample taken from tracheobronchial secretions during the procedure.
The average patient age was 31.2 months and the average hospital stay was 2.5 days. Of the foreign bodies 24 (71%) were organic in nature and 10 (29%) were non-organic. Twenty eight (82.3%) patients had mixed oropharyngeal flora organisms growth. Fifteen (44%) samples were positive for organisms other than oropharyngeal flora with the most common cultured organisms being: Streptococcus pneumonia (4/12%), Haemophilus influenza (4/12%), Moraxella catarrhalis (4/12%). Four samples (12%) grew a fungus; Candida albicans was cultured in 3 patients and Aspergillus glaucus was identified in one sample. Of the non-oropharyngeal organisms 7(47%) demonstrated antibiotic resistance with four having resistance to amoxycillin, two resistant to penicillin and one resistant to cotrimoxazole.
Some children who present with aspirated foreign body may be complicated with secondary airway infection. Antibacterial treatment might be considered in some of these cases. The regimen of antibiotics should aim to cover oropharyngeal flora, S. pneumonia, H. influenza and Moraxella catarrhalis.
Abstract Objective The congenital myasthenic syndromes (CMS) are a group of genetic disorders of neuromuscular transmission causing fatigable weakness. Symptoms may be present from birth, but ...diagnosis is often delayed for several years, notably in post-synaptic CMS due to mutations in the DOK7 gene. Recently, we noted a subgroup of children with CMS in whom congenital stridor and bilateral vocal cord palsy predated other symptoms. All had mutations in the DOK7 gene. The purpose of this study was to review our population of DOK7 CMS patients with congenital stridor and assess whether there were other phenotypic features which might raise suspicion of a diagnosis of CMS in the neonatal period, in the absence of limb weakness and ptosis and prompt earlier referral for neurophysiological investigation, genetic diagnosis and appropriate treatment. Methods A retrospective case review of 11 DOK7 CMS patients at a tertiary referral centre. Results Six patients were identified with DOK7 mutations and congenital stridor, four requiring intubation soon after birth. Four patients had a diagnosis of bilateral vocal cord palsy and three required tracheostomy, successfully decannulated in one after 3 years. All six patients had difficulty with feeding, with weak suck and swallow necessitating nasogastric feeding in five, two of whom required gastrostomy. Despite all six children having had neonatal symptoms, the mean age at CMS diagnosis was 5 years and 9 months. Conclusion CMS, particularly caused by mutations in the DOK7 gene, is a rare but treatable cause of congenital stridor in the neonate. A combination of congenital stridor, especially with an apparently idiopathic bilateral vocal cord palsy and weak suck and swallow should alert the clinician to the possibility of CMS and prompt early referral for neurophysiology and genetic investigations. Confirmation of a CMS diagnosis enables treatment to be initiated, informed management of the VCP and anticipation of myasthenic symptoms, particularly life-threatening respiratory decompensation. Treatment may allow early decannulation or possible avoidance of tracheostomy. At least 12 genes are known to cause CMS; the presence of congenital stridor may help target genetic diagnosis.
Otitis media (OM) is a major reason for antibiotic consumption and surgery in children. Nasopharyngeal carriage of otopathogens,
and nontypeable
(NTHi), is a prerequisite for development of OM, and ...increased nasopharyngeal otopathogen density correlates with disease onset. Vaccines can reduce or eliminate otopathogen carriage, as demonstrated for pneumococcal serotypes included in pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV). The 10-valent PCV (PCV10) includes an NTHi carrier protein, and in 2011 superseded 7-valent PCV on the New Zealand Immunisation Program. Data are conflicting on whether PCV10 provides protection against NTHi carriage or disease. Assessing this in otitis-prone cohorts is important for OM prevention. We compared otopathogen density in the nasopharynx and middle ear of New Zealand PCV7-vaccinated and PCV10-vaccinated otitis-prone and non-otitis-prone children to determine PCV10 impact on NTHi and
carriage. We applied qPCR to specimens collected from 217 PCV7-vaccinated children (147 otitis-prone and 70 non-otitis-prone) and 240 PCV10-vaccinated children (178 otitis-prone and 62 non-otitis-prone). After correcting for age and day-care attendance, no difference was observed between NTHi density in the nasopharynx of PCV7-vaccinated versus PCV10-vaccinated otitis-prone (
= 0.563) or non-otitis-prone (
= 0.513) children. In contrast, pneumococcal nasopharyngeal density was higher in PCV10-vaccinated otitis-prone children than PCV7-vaccinated otitis-prone children (
= 0.003). There was no difference in otopathogen density in middle ear effusion from PCV7-vaccinated versus PCV10-vaccinated otitis-prone children (NTHi
= 0.918;
= 0.415). When pneumococcal carriage was assessed by vaccine serotypes (VT) and non-vaccine serotypes (NVT), there was no difference in VT density (
= 0.546) or NVT density (
= 0.315) between all PCV7-vaccinated versus all PCV10-vaccinated children. In summary, PCV10 did not reduce NTHi density in the nasopharynx or middle ear, and was associated with increased pneumococcal nasopharyngeal density in otitis-prone children in New Zealand. Development of therapies that prevent or reduce otopathogen colonisation density in the nasopharynx are warranted to reduce the burden of OM.
Objectives:
This retrospective cohort study uses endoscopic assessment of the pharyngeal phase of swallowing in infants with laryngomalacia, to ascertain the impact of infant positioning on airway ...compromise and fluid dynamics during breastfeeding. The study aims to identify whether modification of infant positioning at the breast may improve the possibility of safe, successful breastfeeding in infants with laryngomalacia and concurrent breastfeeding difficulty.
Methods:
Twenty-three infants referred for noisy breathing and difficulty feeding were assessed with flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (FEES) during breastfeeding. All had endoscopically confirmed laryngomalacia. During FEES, observations were made of clinical signs of airway compromise as well as endoscopically observable anatomical features and swallowing dynamics during breastfeeding, including tongue base position, view of laryngeal inlet and vocal folds, dynamic supraglottic soft tissue collapse, timing of milk flow into pyriform fossae/hypopharynx relative to sucking, and presence of penetration and/or aspiration. If airway and/or swallowing compromise was present, the infant’s initial position at the breast was altered from supine or semi lateral decubitus position to semi-prone, with a description of the clinical and endoscopically observable changes that subsequently occurred.
Results:
Signs of dynamic airway obstruction and/or compromised airway protection with swallowing were present in 20 of the 23 infants (87%) in their initial supine or semi lateral decubitus position. These 20 infants were repositioned to semi-prone, with improvement and/or resolution of stridor and an improved ability to maintain latch in all infants. Continued endoscopic evaluation following positional change was possible in 16 infants, identifying anterior positioning of the tongue base, reduced dynamic supraglottic tissue collapse, reduced volume of milk flow into pyriform fossae during pauses in sucking and resolution of penetration and aspiration.
Conclusion:
This study has shown how alteration of breastfeeding position to semi-prone may improve dynamic airway obstruction and reduce aspiration risk in infants with laryngomalacia.