A 23-year-old man presented to the emergency department with difficulty speaking after receiving traditional Chinese gua sha therapy on his neck (i.e., scraping of the skin) to treat throat pain that had lasted for two days.
On examination, the patient had clearly visible ecchymoses on the front and sides of his neck (Figure 1A). Although the patient was drooling, he was not in respiratory distress, and there was no stridor. He was afebrile, with normal vital signs. Laryngoscopy showed an enlarged epiglottis pushed against the posterior pharyngeal wall. A radiograph of the patient’s neck showed an elevated hyoid bone and thickening of the retropharyngeal soft tissues (Figure 1B). We administered steroids intravenously, and the patient’s dysphonia resolved within two hours. A subsequent laryngoscopic examination showed reduced swelling of the patient’s epiglottis.
Epiglottitis, also called supraglottitis, is an inflammation of the epiglottis or supraglottic structures. Although usually related to bacterial infection, acute epiglottic swelling and airway obstruction have also been linked to thermal injury and blunt trauma.1 Gua sha therapy involves repeated stroking, with pressure, over lubricated skin using a smooth-edged instrument, such as a spoon or coin. Inappropriate application of the procedure can cause a contusion injury to underlying soft tissue,2 as in our patient’s case.
In our patient, the acute epiglottic swelling induced by gua sha appears to have involved injuries to the pre-epiglottic and retropharyngeal spaces, and a corresponding “vallecula sign” (i.e., poorly defined vallecula secondary to swelling of surrounding tissues) was seen, instead of a more typical radiographic “thumb sign” (i.e., thickening of the epiglottis).3
Footnotes
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Competing interests: None declared.
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This article has been peer reviewed.