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Ann Thorac Surg 1998;65:336-339
© 1998 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
Division of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgery, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Accepted for publication August 21, 1997.
Dr Conlan, Division of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgery, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, 55 Lake Ave North, Worcester, MA 01655-0304 (e-mail: alan.conlan@banyan.ummed.edu).
Background. Video-assisted lobectomy lacks vascular control and presents the potential for serious hemorrhage in a closed cavity. The use of a lighted, flow-directed balloon catheter in the pulmonary artery as an endovascular control device was evaluated.
Methods. A modified light-bearing Swan-Ganz catheter was placed in the left or right pulmonary artery using fluoroscopy. The lit catheter was identified easily through the arterial wall at thoracoscopy. Its inflation allowed the control of proximal blood flow as required. Fully thoracoscopic lobectomy was carried out by isolating and dividing the lobar branches of the pulmonary artery, the pulmonary vein, and the bronchus in anesthetized swine.
Results. Forty-two video-assisted anatomic lobectomies were completed in 30 pigs with balloon catheter control of the pulmonary artery. The balloon effectively controlled experimental hemorrhage caused by puncturing arterial branches (n = 4). It allowed the transection of unlooped lobar arteries (n = 42) and the main interlobar pulmonary artery (n = 3). Catheter displacement back to the heart occurred in 5 animals and balloon catheter technical failures occurred in 3.
Conclusions. The lighted, flow-directed balloon catheter was an effective means of avoiding acute hemorrhage and achieving vascular control in a swine lobectomy model.
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