Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4102980 American Journal of Otolaryngology 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesTo determine if monitoring weight growth curves is a sensitive objective parameter for evaluating operative outcomes after supraglottoplasty.Study designRetrospective chart review.MethodsAn IRB approved retrospective review of patients who underwent supraglottoplasty from 2/28/2012 to 10/20/2014 by the otolaryngology department at a single institution was performed. Variables collected included age, race, sex, preoperative weight percentiles, and weight percentiles at 3 month, 12 month, and 3 year followup intervals.Results20 patients met inclusion criteria. 15 (75%) patients were male and 5 (25%) were female. 9 (45%) patients were African American, 8 (40%) were Caucasian, and 3 (15%) were other. Average weight for age at surgery was 29.8 percentile. 6 (30%) had failure to thrive by weight. By 3 months postop average weight had increased by 7.67 percentile (p = 0.09, 95% CI − 1.62 to 17.0), by 12 months there was an observed increase of 19.1 percentile (p = 0.06, 95% CI 0.47–37.8), and by 3 years the average weight had increased by 26.53 percentile (p = 0.03, 95% CI 4.47-48.59). By three years postop the average weight had normalized (64.5 percentile). Among those who met preoperative failure to thrive criteria (average 0.11 percentile), weight gain was still dramatic with average weight percentile of 37.5 by 3 years postop.ConclusionPatients undergoing supraglottoplasty are typically underweight for age. Statistically significant weight gain occurs in children after going supraglottoplasty. This intervention can normalize their growth chart growth patterns by 3 years postoperatively, even in children with failure to thrive.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Otorhinolaryngology and Facial Plastic Surgery
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