[Treatment of laryngeal pathology associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease].

Vestn Otorinolaringol

Polyclinic No. 2 of Administrative Directorate of the President of the Russian Federation, Moscow, Russia.

Published: January 2023

Objective: To increase the effectiveness of the treatment of laryngeal pathology associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), to determine the indications for the appointment of anti-inflammatory therapy to these patients.

Material And Methods: 120 patients were examined and treated, 58 of them men and 62 women, aged 30 to 82 years with GERD-associated laryngeal pathology. Three groups of patients were formed, comparable in age and gender, in accordance with the type of pachydermia in interarytenoid region; type 1 (40 patients) - pachydermia did not go beyond the middle of the interarytenoid cartilage (according to G.F. Ivanchenko), less than 3 mm, without signs of perifocal inflammation; type 2 (40 patients) - pachydermia of large size, extending beyond the middle of the interarytenoid cartilage with a spread to the entire interarytenoid region (according to G.F. Ivanchenko), often in combination with hyperkeratosis or epithelial dysplasia; type 3 (30 patients) - pachydermia of large size in combination with severe perifocal inflammation. All patients received antireflux therapy. Each group is divided into two subgroups: patients who did not receive anti-inflammatory therapy, and patients who received anti-inflammatory therapy, the basis of which was inhalation with degassed alkaline mineral water, as well as according to indications acetylcysteine, benzyldimethylammonium chloride 0.01% or hydroxymethylquinoxalindioxide, with severe swelling of the mucous membrane - budesonide. All patients completed the questionnaire "Reflux Symptoms Scale" before and after treatment.

Results: In group 2 patients (with type 2 pachydermia), the effectiveness of anti-inflammatory therapy was 75%. Of the 20 patients in this group, after inhaled therapy, 4 patients had pachydermia in interarytenoid region disappeared, 11 patients had type 1 pachydermia visualized, 5 (25%) patients had no pronounced dynamics. In group 3 patients (with type 3 pachydermia), the effectiveness of inhaled treatment was 100%, out of 15 patients after inhaled therapy, type 2 pachydermia was diagnosed in 8 patients, type 1 pachydermia - in 7 patients. In 4 patients, complex therapy led to the complete disappearance of reflux-associated laryngeal granulomas without surgical treatment. The effectiveness of inhaled therapy in relation to patient complaints after a month was 87%, while the effectiveness of treatment of patients without inhalation was 45%.

Conclusions: Indications for the appointment of inhaled anti-inflammatory therapy in patients with reflux-associated pathology of the larynx are the presence of complaints of hoarseness, dryness, tickling, lump in the throat and chronic cough, endolaryngoscopic signs of exacerbation of chronic inflammation of the mucous membrane of the posterior larynx.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.17116/otorino20228706119DOI Listing

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