Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog's lung surgery complicated by accidental stapling of ventilation
By Levionnois, Olivier L et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2006·Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Accidental entrapment of an endo-bronchial blocker tip by a surgical stapler during selective ventilation for lung lobectomy in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A female dog undergoing surgery for a suspected lung abscess had an endobronchial blocker (a device used to help with breathing during surgery) accidentally caught in a surgical stapler. This happened while the vet was trying to remove a part of her lung. After the surgery, the vet noticed an air leak caused by the trapped device, which made it difficult to control her breathing. The vet quickly removed the staples to free the device and re-sealed the lung tissue, allowing the dog to recover successfully.
People also search for: dog lung surgery complications · endobronchial blocker dog · dog breathing problems after surgery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of an endobronchial blocker (EBB) and to perform selective ventilation during pulmonary lobe resection via thoracotomy in a dog and report its accidental stapling in the resection site. STUDY DESIGN: Clinical case report. ANIMAL: One female dog with a suspected abscess or neoplasia of the right caudal pulmonary lobe. METHODS: One-lung ventilation was performed using a wire-guided EBB to seal the contaminated parenchyma and facilitate surgical access. The affected lung parenchyma was resected and the resection site was closed with staples. RESULTS: Lobar resection was performed successfully, but the loop of the EBB guide wire was inadvertently entrapped in the staple line of the lobectomy. Staples were removed to release the wire loop, and the resulting air leak caused loss of ventilation control until the parenchyma was re-sealed. CONCLUSIONS: We recommend removing the wire guide associate with the EBB after successful lung separation to avoid accidents that could have life-threatening consequences if not recognized. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: One-lung ventilation is useful to isolate healthy parenchyma from diseased parenchyma during lobectomy. Anesthesiologists and surgeons need to be aware of the potential complications associated with use of EBB.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16409414/