Factors associated to functional recovery of left vocal fold motion impairment at two-years-old age in very preterm infants.

2021 
OBJECTIVE To describe a cohort of neonates with left vocal fold motion impairment (LVFMI) and the factors associated to it in the neonatal period; procedures required during LVFMI treatment; and clinical outcomes at the age of 2-years. An additional objective was to study those factors which are likely to be most associated to functional recovery of LVFMI at this age. METHODS A cohort of patients born in a tertiary care hospital with a diagnosis of left VFMI was included. Factors registered were: gender; clinical presentation at the time of examination; diagnosis of other laryngeal defects associated; data related to their neonatal period (gestational age, congenital heart defects corrective surgery required, neurologic disease, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, non-invasive ventilation required, invasive ventilation required, and tracheostomy required); treatment applied for LVFMI (tracheostomy and/or laryngeal surgery); need of language and hearing therapy; and outcomes considered by the pediatric otolaryngologist at the 2 years-old follow-up visit. RESULTS A total of 56 patients with LVFMI diagnosis were included. Only 10 patients (17.9%) showed functional recovery from LVFMI at the age of 2 years. We found significant negative association between this recovery and language and hearing therapy (p = 0.03), which was also associated to psychomotor retardation (p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis produced similar results, being language and hearing therapy the only significant factor associated to a worse outcome (OR = 4.77 [CI95% 1.14; 20.08] p = 0.03). CONCLUSION Psychomotor development retardation is negatively associated to functional recovery of full speech in a preterm infant's population with LVFMI diagnosis, regardless of other factors related to LVFMI etiology and severity.
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