| Literature DB >> 28580086 |
Eun-Jin Moon1, Yoon-Ju Go1, Jun-Young Chung1, Jae-Woo Yi1.
Abstract
General anesthesia is the main strategy for almost all thoracic surgeries. However, a growing body of literature has reported successful cases of non-intubated thoracic surgery with regional anesthesia. This alternative strategy not only prevents complications related to general anesthesia, such as lung injury, incomplete re-expansion and intubation related problems, but also accords with trends of shorter hospital stay and lower overall costs. We experienced a successful case of non-intubated thoracoscopic decortication for a 68-year-old man who was diagnosed as empyema while the patient kept spontaneously breathing with moderate sedation under thoracic epidural anesthesia. The patient showed a fast recovery without concerns of general anesthesia related complications and effective postoperative analgesia through thoracic epidural patient-controlled analgesia device. This is the first report of non-intubated thoracoscopic surgery under thoracic epidural anesthesia in Korea, and we expect that various well designed prospective studies will warrant the improvement of outcomes in non-intubated thoracoscopic surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Non-intubated; Thoracic epidural anesthesia; Thoracoscopic surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 28580086 PMCID: PMC5453897 DOI: 10.4097/kjae.2017.70.3.341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Anesthesiol ISSN: 2005-6419
Fig. 1Chest CT scan. Axial section shows a large amount of unilateral loculated effusion in the right lung.
Fig. 2Intraoperative thoracoscopic findings. (A) Pleural peel was identified covering the parietal pleura and atelectatic lung in the right lower pleural cavity. (B) After decortication, the lung was completely re-expanded.