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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 40, 181-187, Copyright © 1985 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
RA Hopkins, RM Ungerleider, EW Staub and WG Young Jr
Thoracoplasty is a time-honored but, at present, rarely indicated procedure
for reducing thoracic cavity volume. This study reviews a series of 30
patients treated with thoracoplasty over a 14-year period (1970 through
1983). Indications were to close a persistent pleural space in 28 patients
and to tailor the thoracic cavity to accept diminished lung volume
concomitant with a pulmonary resection in 2 patients. Persistent pleural
space, often associated with a bronchopleural fistula (24 patients),
occurred after operation in 19 patients: following pulmonary resection in
17 patients, resection of mesothelioma in 1 patient, and following
decortication without resection in 1. In the remaining 9 patients with a
persistent pleural space, problems developed from primary lung destruction
due to tuberculosis (4 patients), postpneumonic empyema (1 patient), or as
late infection of a residual pleural space many years after therapeutic
pneumothorax and collapse therapy for tuberculosis (4 patients). The
overall success rate of thoracoplasty in eliminating intrathoracic space
problems was 73%. There were 3 deaths (10%) and 5 failures to heal,
representing a 33% failure in the first half of the series (to 1976) and a
17% failure rate thereafter (1 death and 1 nonhealing patient). The primary
underlying disease was tuberculosis in 23 patients, 8 of whom had
concomitant aspergilloma and 1, atypical tuberculosis. The failures were
analyzed and reviewed to clarify the principles for the successful use of
thoracoplasty. It is concluded that thoracoplasty is a rarely required
salvage-type procedure applicable to moderately debilitated patients in
whom it is considered desirable to eliminate open drainage.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
The modern use of thoracoplasty
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