Lung cancer involving the carina can be treated by surgery, but patients must be carefully selected before the operation. Because pneumonectomy is required in addition to carinal resection, patients must be able to withstand the procedure, and they must be told that the operative mortality is 2 to 4 times higher than what is expected after standard pneumonectomy. Patients who have mediastinal nodal disease documented preoperatively by mediastinoscopy should not have this operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Sleeve lobectomy (SL) in a lung-saving procedure indicated for central tumors for which the alternative is pneumonectomy (PN). Although it has been suggested that it may provide as good if not better survival results than pneumonectomy in the treatment of lung cancer, there are very few reports of clinical series comparing operative mortality, survival, and sites of recurrences between these procedures.
Methods: Survival and sites of recurrences were analyzed and compared in 1,230 consecutive patients who underwent PN (n = 1,046) or SL (n = 184) in a single institution.
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg
March 1998
Objective: To investigate the clinical characteristics and determinants of operative mortality and long-term survival of elderly patients submitted to pulmonary resection for intended cure of lung cancer.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of 500 consecutive pulmonary resections performed in patients aged over 70 years from 1975 to 1996. Predictors of in-hospital mortality were identified by univariate and multivariate analyses.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
February 1994
Sleeve lobectomy is a lung-saving procedure indicated for central tumors for which the alternative is a pneumonectomy. The relation between survival and nodal status is controversial because, in most series, the presence of N1 disease adversely affects the prognosis with few or no long-term survivors. During the period 1972 to 1992, 142 patients underwent sleeve resection for lung cancer at our institution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine the current operative morbidity for elective surgery of lung cancer, the authors reviewed the charts of 1076 consecutive patients who underwent pulmonary resection between 1978 and 1984 at two major Canadian teaching hospitals. Of these patients, 731 (68%) had a normal course. Minor complications occurred in 206 patients (19%); the majority were supraventricular arrhythmias (100 events) and atelectasis (41 events).
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