J Pediatr Intensive Care 2013; 02(03): 131-135
DOI: 10.3233/PIC-13062
Case Report
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart – New York

A near lethal case of plastic bronchitis following truncal valve replacement

Kristin Lang
a   Department of Pediatric and Congenital Cardiothoracic Surgery, Levine Children's Hospital, Charlotte, NC, USA
,
Elizabeth Champion
b   Department of Pediatric Pulmonology, Levine Children's Hospital, Charlotte, NC, USA
,
Graham Cosper
c   Department of Pediatric General Surgery, Levine Children's Hospital, Charlotte, NC, USA
,
Benjamin Peeler
a   Department of Pediatric and Congenital Cardiothoracic Surgery, Levine Children's Hospital, Charlotte, NC, USA
,
Thomas Maxey
a   Department of Pediatric and Congenital Cardiothoracic Surgery, Levine Children's Hospital, Charlotte, NC, USA
› Author Affiliations

Subject Editor:
Further Information

Publication History

14 February 2013

02 October 2013

Publication Date:
28 July 2015 (online)

Abstract

Plastic bronchitis is a condition in which large, rubber-like, bronchial casts develop in the tracheobronchial tree causing airway obstruction. It is an unusual disorder that occurs in various disease states. Most case reports of plastic bronchitis associated with congenital heart disease are in patients palliated with Fontan physiology. We describe a 13-year-old girl with DiGeorge syndrome and truncus arteriosus who underwent an uneventful truncal valve replacement. The child developed plastic bronchitis on postoperative day eight requiring extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation support and daily bronchoscopy to remove bronchial casts. Our patient did not have elevated systemic venous pressures or Fontan physiology. We speculate the etiology of plastic bronchitis may have been surgical trauma to the lymphatic channels surrounding the bronchi and disruption of pleural adhesions. A comprehensive evaluation revealed no specific cause and the diagnosis of idiopathic plastic bronchitis was made.