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Case Reports
. 2006 Apr;41(4):278-83.
doi: 10.1055/s-2006-925233.

[Post-lobectomy bronchopleural fistula -- a challenge for postoperative intensive care]

[Article in German]
Affiliations
Case Reports

[Post-lobectomy bronchopleural fistula -- a challenge for postoperative intensive care]

[Article in German]
T Mendel et al. Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther. 2006 Apr.

Abstract

Bronchopleural fistula (BPF) and bronchial stump insufficiency (BSI) after lobectomies and pneumonectomies are dreaded complications with incidences of up to 12 % and a mortality rate of up to 51 %. Apart from the basic illness causes include complications like aspiration-pneumonia and ARDS, formation of empyema as well as histories of sepsis. Corticoid treatments, old age, diabetes mellitus, previous irradiation as well as post-operative mechanical ventilation (barotrauma) are often counted among contributing causes. Suturing the bronchus and reinforcement by tissue are still the methods of choice, but they are often counter-indicated in high-risk patients. Endoscopic treatments with partial lung occlusions, e. g. by insertion of spongiosa, coils, and/or fibrin glue have been described. However, they require the respective area to be probable. With only one third the rate of success is quite unsatisfactory. The retro-graded instillation of inflammatory-selerotizing substances, like doxycycline, via a chest tube leads to a pleurodesis caused by adhesion of the remaining lung parenchyma to the thoracic wall and a reduction in size of the residual pleural space. In an 82-year old female patient a BPF of the second upper lobe bronchus was detected after a middle lobe resection for abscess and post-radiation ulcer following a mastectomy for carcinoma. The leakage was detected on bronchoscopy by retro-graded instillation via the chest tube of methylene-blue solution into the thoracic cavity. After administering the water-soluble contrast agent amidotrizoic acid in a similar manner a CT confirmed the diagnosis. As the bronchial segment concerned could not be entered selectively, preservation of the right lung lobe's residual ventilation by endoscopic-occlusion procedures was ruled out. Employing a strictly conservative therapy (spontaneous ventilation, retro-graded doxycycline instillations) complete healing with a fully ventilated lower lobe could be achieved over a period of 78 days. BPF as well as residual intro-thoracic cavities after lobectomies pose a serious problem. Using methylene blue for a retro-graded demonstration of BPF during bronchoscopy presents a feasible and cost-efficient diagnostic method. A strictly applied conservative therapy including short-time low-pressure artificial respiration as well as obliteration by fibrous tissue of the thoracic cavity using doxycycline is a feasible procedure for inoperable high-risk patients.

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