| Literature DB >> 32025970 |
Izumi Kawagoe1,2, Masakazu Hayashida3, Daizoh Satoh4, Kenji Suzuki5, Eiichi Inada6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ventilation failure commonly occurs when a standard left-sided double-lumen tube is used in patients after left upper lobectomy having remarkable angulation of the left main bronchus. We present a female without remarkable angulation, in whom ventilation failure occurred after lateral jackknife positioning. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Double-lumen tube; Lateral jackknife position; One-lung ventilation; Robot-assisted thoracic surgery; Silbroncho® tube
Year: 2018 PMID: 32025970 PMCID: PMC6966923 DOI: 10.1186/s40981-018-0188-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JA Clin Rep ISSN: 2363-9024
Fig. 1Chest X-rays before the previous lingula-sparing left upper lobectomy (a) and before the current robot-assisted right upper lobectomy (b). An outline and a centerline of the trachea and the left main bronchus are delineated with white and black lines, respectively, on each chest X-ray. The distance from the trachea to the angulation point is 3.4 cm. Note that compared with the chest X-ray a, the chest X-ray b exhibits mild angulation of the left main bronchus, indicated by a combination of the 127° T-MB angle and the 132° PL-DL angle, which does not meet the criteria for remarkable bronchial angulation, defined by a combination of a wide T-MB angle (> 140°) and a narrow PL-DL angle (< 100°) [6]. T-MB angle, angle formed by the trachea and left main bronchus; PL-DL angle, angle formed by the proximal and distal portions of the left main bronchus