Breathing difficulties in young children are a common cause of contact in the health care system, and are often related to harmless infection-triggered conditions in the upper and lower respiratory tract. In the vast majority of the cases, the condition is self-limiting and the child can be treated in primary care. In more serious or long-term cases, the child is referred to the specialist health care, most often to pediatricians, where the focus is naturally directed to pulmonary medical causes such as asthma, allergies and infections, as these make up the majority of breathing difficulties in children. Less common and less well-known are breathing difficulties in young children caused by airway obstructions in the upper airways, which might cause a characteristic respiratory distress called stridor. Stridor occurs as a result of turbulent airflow through a relatively narrower part of the upper airways, such as the larynx and trachea, and produces a high-frequency whistling sound during inspiration. Causes of stridor can be congenital or acquired, and stridor can often be confused with asthma. It is appropriate to refer to an ENT doctor for a thorough anatomical examination of the upper respiratory tract in these affected children to identify the cause of stridor and to be able to provide the correct treatment.
Laryngomalacia is the most frequent cause of stridor in children under 1 year of age, and is a congenital condition where the tissue at the top of the larynx collapses over the airway opening to the larynx and therefore creates an upper airway obstruction during inspiration. In severe cases, laryngomalacia can be curatively treated with surgery.
For long time the ENT departments and pediatric departments at regional hospitals in Norway have been responsible for the treatment of children under 1 year of age with laryngomalacia. However, experience in children under 1 year with laryngomalacia is limited, and there is a lack of systematic mapping and follow-up of these children. In Health South-East in Norway, with approximately 3.1 million inhabitants, children with a severe degree of stridor will be referred to the ENT department and/or the pediatric department at Oslo University Hospital. In addition, Oslo University Hospital also receives children with stridor from other health regions in Norway. Therefore, the patient base is well suited for a systematic mapping and follow-up. In this research project, the investigators want to carry out a mapping and follow-up of children with laryngomalacia, investigate how affected these children are by their breathing difficulties and the impact it has on sleep and quality of life on the child and the family. The investigators also want to investigate whether the treatment improves these variables.
In addition, the investigators want to recruit a control group of healthy children under 1 year of age to examine sleep and mapping the quality of life of the child and family. These children will be recruited from health centers, and the investigators want to follow them for up to 1 year.
In both groups the investigators want to use artificial intelligence and machine learning when analyzing the sleep examinations.