1 / 18

Bronchial Atresia

Bronchial Atresia. Bill Lee Acc# 115057. “Gus” Hudson 5 mo. Male Weimaraner Chronic upper airway noise, congestion, coughing since purchased at 8 wks. of age + TTW at rDVM – Manheimia hemolytica Several Abx Initially resolves but returns. Bronchoscopy. Intrathoracic tracheal stricture

perry
Download Presentation

Bronchial Atresia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bronchial Atresia Bill Lee Acc# 115057

  2. “Gus” Hudson • 5 mo. Male Weimaraner • Chronic upper airway noise, congestion, coughing since purchased at 8 wks. of age • + TTW at rDVM – Manheimia hemolytica • Several Abx • Initially resolves but returns

  3. Bronchoscopy • Intrathoracic tracheal stricture • Bx – fibrosis and suppurative inflammation • Bronchi off right and left caudal lobar bronchus ended abruptly in a “blind pouch” or “membrane”

  4. Resolving aspiration pneumonia

  5. CT

  6. Bronchial Atresia • Unknown Etiology • Sequela to pulm. vascular insult during fetal dev. • Separation of the bronchial bud (similar to bronchogenic cysts) • Results in distal bronchi that do not communicate with prox. airways • Most (humans) are asymptomatic • Recurrent inf., dyspnea, cough, wheezing

  7. Bronchial Atresia • Imaging findings • Branching, tubular, ovoid or spherical mass (possibly cavitated w/ fluid line) • “bronchocoele” – impacted with bronchial secretions • Mass surrounded by hyperinflated lung w/ decreased vasc. markings • air can enter airways distal to obstruction via one way valves (pores of Kohn, canals of Lambert) • cannot exit via bronchial tree • Lung lobe distal to obstruction may develop pneumonia

  8. Other conditions may result in a bronchocoele • Bronchial F.B. • Broncholith • Stricture • Neoplasia • Asthma

  9. Bronchial Atresia • Imaging considered essential for DX • CT is modality of choice • Bronchoscopy can be normal

More Related