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International Bulletin of Otorhinolaryngology

Clinical aspects of satellite diseases and cricoarytenoid joint involvement. Arthritis of the cricoarytenoid joint. Clinical case.

A. Topalova-Shishmanova, K. Dzhambazov, Sp. Konsulov, N. Traikova, R. Anesteva, M. Kraeva

Abstract

Introduction: Laryngeal involvement in rheumatoid arthritis is a rarely mentioned complication in clinical practice. In the literature over the last 10 years, single articles on the subject have been published, presenting a small number of clinical cases. Cricoarytenoid arthritis is a life-threatening condition requiring timely anesthesia and otorhinolaryngological intervention, where the tracheostomy has an important therapeutic place.
Aim: With the presentation of our clinical case we aim to expand the knowledge about systemic diseases and their possible acute manifestation in otorhinolaryngological practice. Materials and methods: We present a clinical case of patient M.S., 63 years old, female, with a long medical history of rheumatoid arthritis. She was admitted to the clinic with a tracheostomy cannula placed for acute laryngeal dyspnea. Physical examination with a fibrolaryngoscope revealed bilateral paresis of the vocal folds, in a medial position, without phonatory and respiratory activity. Computer tomography of the neck, chest, with a focus on the mediastinum – without clinical data on tumor processes. Laboratory tests reveal a repeatedly elevated rheumatoid factor.
Results: MRI revealed a collapse of the larynx, with pronounced fatty degeneration of the thyroarytenoid and cricoarytenoid muscles. The patient was referred to a rheumatologist to control the chronic exacerbation process, with a definitive tracheostomy cannula.
Conclusion: Pathological changes in the cricoarytenoid joint in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, as well as scleroderma, lupus, Felty’s syndrome, Tiez syndrome and other systemic diseases, are a common finding, although diagnosed in the past at autopsy. It can be acute, subacute and chronic, but in otorhinolaryngological practice it occupies an important clinical place in emergencies.

Keywords

cricoarytenoid joint, rheumatoid arthritis, tracheostomy

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14748/orl.v17i2.7981

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