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Ann Thorac Surg 2004;77:406-409
© 2004 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
a Department of Thoracic Surgery, University of Parma, Parma, Italy
Accepted for publication April 28, 2003.
* Address reprint requests to Dr Carbognani, Department of Thoracic Surgery, via Gramsci 14, 43100 Parma, Italy.
e-mail: paolo.carbognani{at}unipr.it
| Abstract |
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METHODS: From January 1994 to December 2002 we treated 13 patients with diagnosis of postintubation tracheobronchial laceration. The treatment was nonsurgical in 3 patients (1-cm-long tear) and surgical in the other cases. Two lesions extending to the main bronchi were repaired through a right thoracotomy as well as four lesions limited to the trachea observed before January 2001. After this date we used the transcervical approach for entirely intratracheal lesions: in three cases we performed an anterior transverse tracheotomy and in one case a transverse and midline vertical incision (T tracheotomy).
RESULTS: Both conservative and surgical therapy were successful in all the cases. Two patients in the thoracotomy group had a transient right vocal cord palsy. No morbidity was observed with the cervical approach. Normal healing of the sutures was evidenced by an endoscopic follow-up 30 days later.
CONCLUSIONS: In our experience nonsurgical treatment is advisable in small (length < 2 cm) uncomplicated tears. Concerning surgery, thoracotomy is indicated in tracheal lacerations extending to the main bronchi, whereas the transcervical approach is preferred for intratracheal tears because of its efficacy in reaching and suturing the lesions extending to the carina and for its limited invasiveness.
| Introduction |
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| Material and methods |
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| Results |
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| Comment |
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Tracheobronchoscopy is the mandatory investigation to establish the diagnosis and to identify the anatomy to choose the appropriate treatment and approach. Our experience confirms this statement, as no discrepancies were observed between the length of tracheal tear measured by the preoperative bronchoscopy and the intraoperative findings. Nonsurgical therapy must be considered in small (length < 2 cm) uncomplicated tears in stable patients, because under these conditions healing can be achieved with minimal risks and discomfort for the patient [4, 5]. Surgery is nevertheless the treatment of choice for the great majority of patients, although it should be performed promptly to guarantee success, and to avoid a feared complication, that of descendent mediastinitis [1, 2]. We can distinguish between a traditional surgical approach performed through a right thoracotomy and a more recent transcervical approach proposed in 1995 by Angelillo-Mackinlay [8]. Each approach has its own indication. The so-called traditional approach is suggested when the tracheal laceration is extended to the membranous part of the main bronchi. The cervical approach is used for postintubation lesions limited to the trachea. Mussi and associates [2] and Lancelin and colleagues [3] have popularized and modified this procedure, which we have recently adopted. In three cases we used the transverse anterior tracheotomy and in one case, in which the laceration reached the carina, we proved that the suture can be made easily if the anterior transverse tracheotomy is completed with a longitudinal one to make a T tracheal incision. The use of a thoracoscopic needle-holder can be helpful in performing the distal part of the suture in the narrow endotracheal space.
In this approach, we suggest that the trachea should be entered first through the anterior transverse tracheotomy, which enables direct evaluation of the tear; the longitudinal tracheotomy should be added only in selected cases, if the lesion reaches the carina. Considering the vascular support of the trachea, we do not think that the T-shaped tracheotomy adds further risks to the normal healing of the sutured incisions.
We can conclude that, except for selected cases in which nonsurgical therapy is indicated, surgery is the treatment of choice in the vast majority of postintubation tracheal injuries. Although thoracotomy still has its own indications, the transcervical approach should be the procedure of choice in postintubation lesions limited to the trachea because of its low invasiveness, which avoids the morbidity caused by thoracotomy, and to the lateral dissection of the trachea.
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