Objective: To compare the Classification of Acute Laryngeal Injuries (CALI) with other classifications to determine which of these offers the greatest sensitivity and specificity in predicting the development of subglottic stenosis.
Methods: All children intubated for the first time in the pediatric intensive care unit were included and subjected to flexible fiber-optic laryngoscopy (FFL) within 8 h of extubation. Their injuries were categorized using the CALI, as well as adapted classifications from Lindholm, Colice and Benjamin. The children were followed up to determine who developed subglottic stenosis.
Results: This study included 194 children, with a median age of 2.67 months. The sensitivity and specificity of the CALI were 90% and 73%, respectively. The CALI showed greater specificity than the adapted classifications from Colice and Benjamin (p < 0.001 for both), and greater sensitivity than the adapted classification from Lindholm (p < 0.001).
Conclusions: Based on the CALI, 90% of children who developed subglottic stenosis had moderate to severe injuries on the initial FFL. The CALI includes all injury types described by Benjamin, as well as a proposed severity scale for these lesions, and was predictive of the development of chronic laryngeal injury.
Keywords: Granulation tissue; Infants; Larynx; Subglottic stenosis; Ulceration.
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