Surgical Respiratory Cases Flashcards

1
Q

Clinical signs Lobectomy

A
  • Reduced expansion and chest wall deformity
  • Thoracotomy scar: same for either upper or lower lobe
  • Trachea is central
  • Lower lobectomy: dull percussion note over lower zone with absent breath sounds
  • Upper lobectomy: may have normal examination or may have a hyper‐resonant percussion note over upper zone with a dull percussion note at base where the hemidiaphragm is elevated slightly
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2
Q

Investigation for Lobectomy

A
  • CXR: maybe no overt abnormality apparent other than slight raised hemidiaphragm; remember that the right hemidiaphragm should be higher than the left in health
  • CT chest: loss of a lobe with associated truncation of bronchus or pulmonary vessels
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3
Q

Indications for lobectomy

A
  • Bronchiectasis
  • Early stage I-II NSCLC
  • Lung nodules
  • TB
  • Lung abscess
  • Fungal infection
  • Massive hemoptysis (aspergilloma, cavity, AV malformation, bronchiectasis)
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4
Q

Pneumonectomy

Clinical signs

A
  • Thoracotomy scar (indistinguishable from thoracotomy scar performed for a lobectomy)
  • Reduced expansion on side of the pneumonectomy
  • Trachea deviated towards the side of the pneumonectomy
  • Dull percussion note throughout the hemithorax
  • Absent tactile vocal fremitus beneath the thoracotomy scar
  • Bronchial breathing in the upper zone with reduced breath sound throughout remainder of hemithorax (bronchial breathing is due to transmitted sound from major airways)
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5
Q

Investigations for Pneumonectomy

A
  • CXR: complete white out on side of pneumonectomy
  • Pneumonectomy space fills with gelatinous material within a few weeks of the operation
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6
Q

Indications for pneumonectomy

A

Malignant indications:
* pulmonary metastasis (uncommon)
* Non-small cell lung carcinoma
Benign conditions:
* - Chronic infection
multiple abscesses
bronchiectasis
fungal infection
TB

* - Traumatic lung injury
* - Bronchial obstruction with lung damage
* - Congenital lung diseases

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7
Q

Lung transplantation

Signal lung transplant

A
  • Clinical signs:
    thoracotomy scar;
    normal exam on side of scar;
    may have clinical signs on opposite hemithorax
  • Indications for ‘dry lung’ condititions: COPD; pulmonary fibrosis
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8
Q

Lung transplantation

Double lung transplant

A
  • Clinical signs: clamshell incision – from the one axilla along the line of the lower ribs, up to the xiphisternum to the other axilla
  • Indications ‘wet lung’ conditions: CF, bronchiectasis or pulmonary hypertension
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