The “Hitch Stitch”: An Effective Method of Preventing Migration in High Tracheal Stenosis

Background: The incidence of caudal stent migration in high tracheal stenting is 13-21% and is common with silicone stents. This can lead to major problems, including emergency repeat procedures. Several antimigration methods are described, but have limitations in terms of their success rate, availa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Respiration 2017-01, Vol.93 (2), p.106-111
Hauptverfasser: Mehta, Ravindra M., Singla, Abhinav, Shah, Aashish, Loknath, Chakravarthi
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container_end_page 111
container_issue 2
container_start_page 106
container_title Respiration
container_volume 93
creator Mehta, Ravindra M.
Singla, Abhinav
Shah, Aashish
Loknath, Chakravarthi
description Background: The incidence of caudal stent migration in high tracheal stenting is 13-21% and is common with silicone stents. This can lead to major problems, including emergency repeat procedures. Several antimigration methods are described, but have limitations in terms of their success rate, availability, cost or ease of the procedure. Objectives: We describe an innovative method of stent migration prevention using a simple percutaneous anchoring “hitch stitch”, validated in a large series. Methods: After tracheal stent placement, an Ethilon suture was passed into the stent lumen through an 18-G needle. To take this suture back to the exterior to complete the stitch, a retrieval loop was passed through another 14-G percutaneous cannula inserted into the stent lumen. Bronchoscopically, using a forceps the first suture was pulled inside the loop, the loop was retracted, the suture was exteriorized, and the knot was completed and embedded subcutaneously. While removing the stent, an endoscopic scissor was used to cut the stitch to free the stent. Results: A total of 42 “hitch stitches” were done in 29 patients over 5 years, predominantly for silicone stents. Indications for stenting included postintubation tracheal stenosis (83.3%), malignancy (11.9%) and tracheoesophageal fistula (4.8%, metal stents). The procedure was successful in 41/42 (97.6%) patients. Stitch removal was uncomplicated. Conclusion: This is the largest series of an external stent anchoring procedure as a migration prevention strategy in high tracheal stenting, applicable to both silicone and metal stents. Stent migration prevention using this “hitch stitch” is simple, safe and successful, without any complications during stent removal.
doi_str_mv 10.1159/000453075
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This can lead to major problems, including emergency repeat procedures. Several antimigration methods are described, but have limitations in terms of their success rate, availability, cost or ease of the procedure. Objectives: We describe an innovative method of stent migration prevention using a simple percutaneous anchoring “hitch stitch”, validated in a large series. Methods: After tracheal stent placement, an Ethilon suture was passed into the stent lumen through an 18-G needle. To take this suture back to the exterior to complete the stitch, a retrieval loop was passed through another 14-G percutaneous cannula inserted into the stent lumen. Bronchoscopically, using a forceps the first suture was pulled inside the loop, the loop was retracted, the suture was exteriorized, and the knot was completed and embedded subcutaneously. While removing the stent, an endoscopic scissor was used to cut the stitch to free the stent. Results: A total of 42 “hitch stitches” were done in 29 patients over 5 years, predominantly for silicone stents. Indications for stenting included postintubation tracheal stenosis (83.3%), malignancy (11.9%) and tracheoesophageal fistula (4.8%, metal stents). The procedure was successful in 41/42 (97.6%) patients. Stitch removal was uncomplicated. Conclusion: This is the largest series of an external stent anchoring procedure as a migration prevention strategy in high tracheal stenting, applicable to both silicone and metal stents. Stent migration prevention using this “hitch stitch” is simple, safe and successful, without any complications during stent removal.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0025-7931</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1423-0356</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1159/000453075</identifier><identifier>PMID: 27988514</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Basel, Switzerland: S. 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source Karger Journals; MEDLINE
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Bronchoscopy
Chest
Child
Complications
Complications and side effects
Female
Foreign-Body Migration - prevention & control
Humans
Interventional Pulmonology
Male
Middle Aged
Retrospective Studies
Silicones
Stenosis
Stent (Surgery)
Stents
Surgery
Suture Techniques
Trachea
Tracheal Stenosis - surgery
Treatment Outcome
Young Adult
title The “Hitch Stitch”: An Effective Method of Preventing Migration in High Tracheal Stenosis
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