Minithoracotomy combined with mechanically stapled bronchial and vascular ligation for anatomical lung resection.

Publication/Presentation Date

6-1-2004

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The most appropriate approach to anatomic pulmonary resection has been debated with the advance of minimally invasive techniques and especially the common use of mechanical staplers. Video assisted surgery and muscle-sparing thoracotomy are established options of surgical approach for lung resection. We utilize a combined technique of vertical muscle sparing minithoracotomy and mechanical closure of the hilum structures to accomplish lung resection.

METHODS: From December 1995 through January 2002, 713 patients (mean age, 65 +/- 11, 44.6% male) underwent anatomic pulmonary resection including 64 pneumonectomies, 514 lobectomies, and 135 formal segmental resections. Pulmonary resection was approached though a direct access, vertical, minithoracotomy (< 10 cm), and vascular ligation was performed with port-access endostapling instrumentation. Full mediastinal lymph node sampling was performed for primary lung cancer.

RESULTS: The average operative time was 55 minutes for lobectomy-formal segmentectomy and 62 minutes for pneumonectomy. An average of 3.6 staple applications were utilized to ligate the pulmonary vasculature (n = 2548 for 713 patients). Operative vascular complications included 5 minor intimal fractures, 1 posterior segmental arterial avulsion, and 1 staple misfiring for an adverse event rate during stapler application of 0.27%. Only one conversion to standard thoracotomy was necessary to control bleeding from the pulmonary vein. There were no intraoperative deaths.

CONCLUSIONS: Vertical minithoracotomy is a safe and expedited approach for anatomic lung resection. Direct visualization for dissection and effective pulmonary hilum mechanical closure with staplers were demonstrated. This approach is a reasonable option when a complete video-assisted surgery seems to be hazardous and a full open thoracotomy could represent an additional morbidity.

Volume

77

Issue

6

First Page

1904

Last Page

1909

ISSN

0003-4975

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

15172234

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

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