JTCVS techniques
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To develop a team-based institutional infrastructure for navigating management of a novel disease, to determine a safe and effective approach for performing tracheostomies in patients with COVID-19 respiratory failure, and to review outcomes of patients and health care personnel following implementation of this approach. ⋯ Patients with respiratory failure from COVID-19 disease may benefit from tracheostomy. This can be completed effectively and safely without viral transmission to health care personnel. Performing tracheostomies earlier in the course of disease may expedite patient recovery and improve intensive care unit resource use. The creation of a collaborative Task Force is an effective strategic approach for management of novel disease.
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The current COVID-19 pandemic has shown a relevant rate of patients developing an acute respiratory distress syndrome that requires hospitalization. Approximately 3-17% of hospitalized patients require Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and invasive mechanical ventilation. Initial recommendations advocated for early intubation, while early tracheotomy should not be routinely performed in COVID-19 patients. ⋯ A conservative endoscopic management was not successful and we performed a laryngo-tracheal resection. The specimen was negative for COVID-19 but the pathological examination revealed how the virus damaged the trachea. This case is, as far as we are aware, the first case of laryngo-tracheal surgery in a COVID-19 patient and provides an insight to justify the higher rate of tracheal injuries occurring in intubated COVID-19 patients.