PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fluoroscopy-guided one-lung breathing tube placement in a cat

By Verdier, Natali et al.·Published in Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia·2025·Clinical Department for Small Animals and Horses·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Fluoroscopy-assisted endobronchial intubation in a cat undergoing thoracoscopy.

Species:
cat
Breathing & coughCats

Plain-English summary

A 14-year-old male Domestic Short Hair cat needed surgery to ligate the thoracic duct, which required a special breathing technique called one-lung ventilation. Since the usual tools weren't available, the veterinarians used a modified endotracheal tube and a guidewire to help position it correctly. They confirmed the technique was working by observing the cat's breathing and using imaging during the procedure. The surgery went smoothly without complications, and after the operation, the cat was able to recover in the intensive care unit.

People also search for: cat surgery breathing problems · one-lung ventilation in cats · thoracoscopy cat recovery · endotracheal tube placement cat

Abstract

A 14-year-old, male castrated, Domestic Short Hair cat was presented for thoracic duct ligation via thoracoscopy. To optimise surgical visualisation, the surgeons requested one-lung ventilation. Because adequately sized bronchial blockers or fibreoptic bronchoscopes were not available, a modified single-lumen endotracheal tube guided by a novel method was used. The distance between the incisors, the carina and the mainstem bronchi was premeasured on a computed tomography scan. Once under general anaesthesia, one-lung ventilation was achieved by introducing a guidewire through a modified, previously extended endotracheal tube, confirming its advancement towards the left main bronchus with fluoroscopy, and subsequently advancing the endotracheal tube over the guidewire. Confirmation of one-lung ventilation was initially obtained by observation of unilateral thoracic excursions and later confirmed by thoracoscopic visualisation of right lung atelectasis. The manoeuvre was successfully completed in 8 minutes and no clinically significant complications occurred. Adequate ventilation was achieved using pressure control mode and positive end-expiratory pressure, and allowing permissive hypercapnia. After thoracic duct ligation, bilateral lung ventilation was resumed by slight withdrawal of the endotracheal tube. The cat was allowed to recover from anaesthesia and transferred to the intensive care unit. This report describes a novel method to achieve one-lung ventilation in a cat that may constitute a valid alternative when adequately sized bronchial blockers or fibreoptic bronchoscopes are not available.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39922730/