JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Pediatric nasal valve surgery: short-term outcomes and complications.

OBJECTIVES: To examine the short-term outcomes and complications of open nasal valve surgery in children under 16 years of age.

STUDY DESIGN: case series and chart review study setting: an urban, tertiary, pediatric otolaryngology practice.

METHODS: Children under 16 years of age who had undergone nasal valve surgery with cartilage grafting for functional indications were identified. Patients with cleft-related nasal deformities were excluded. Charts were reviewed for indications and short-term outcomes (patient satisfaction and postoperative complications within the first 90 days). A literature review assessed prior outcomes in adult nasal valve patients.

RESULTS: Fifteen pediatric patients, 15 years old or younger, were identified as having undergone open nasal valve repair utilizing septal or auricular cartilage grafts. Patient age ranged from 6 to 15 years. Surgical indications were nasal obstruction with nasal valve stenosis related to either previous trauma (n=10), congenital deformity (n=3), iatrogenic injury (n=1) or hemangioma of infancy (n=1). All patients noted improvement of symptoms at the 90 day interval or later. There was one episode of self-limited epistaxis, which occurred on postoperative day 7 following splint removal.

CONCLUSIONS: In children, an obstructive nasal breathing pattern may be caused by nasal valve collapse, which can be addressed with nasal valve surgery. This small series suggests that short-term results in children may be similar to those observed in the adult population. Pediatric nasal valve surgery outcomes have not been described previously; studies focused on long-term outcomes following pediatric nasal valve surgery are needed.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4.

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