Tracheobronchial injuries (TBI) are a heterogenous group of sometimes life-threatening traumas with different management approaches. Symptoms are mediastinal and subcutaneous emphysema, bloody secretions from the airway or haemoptysis in alert patients, and high air leakage along the cuff or increased ventilatory resistance may be signs for TBI in intubated patients. The necessity of immediate clinical evaluation, CT-scan and bronchoscopic evaluation are essential for prompt diagnosis and classification as well as experienced air way management and treatment, these patients are best managed from interdisciplinary teams including thoracic surgeons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Mediastinal repositioning and the use of allogenic implants to obliterate the postpneumonectomy space is the main principle of postpneumonectomy syndrome (PPS) correction. We present a rare case with a PPS in combination with a congenital pectus excavatum. As a pectus excavatus deformity reduces retrosternal space, simple repositioning of the heart is impossible unless combined with a sternum elevation.
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