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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Tracheoesophageal Fistula with Dr. Daniel von Allmen

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Expert discussion on managing tracheoesophageal fistula and esophageal atresia, covering initial diagnostic approach, multidisciplinary team structure, and complications including long gap atresia and recurrent fistulas. Features insights from Cincinnati Children's comprehensive aerodigestive center on both straightforward and complex cases.

Key Takeaways

  • Always personally pass the NG tube and inject air to confirm diagnosis—avoid treating presumed EA without direct verification.
  • Assess abdomen exam: scaphoid suggests no distal fistula; distended suggests distal TEF with air entry into GI tract.
  • Visible distended proximal pouch on X-ray is key; absence may indicate misdiagnosis or rare proximal fistula.
  • Multidisciplinary aerodigestive teams (ENT, GI, pulmonary, surgery, genetics) improve outcomes for complex TEF/EA cases.
  • Contrast studies are safe if radiologist knows obstruction is likely; useful when proximal pouch not visible or history atypical.

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