Harmonic scalpel in video-assisted thoracoscopic thymic resections.

Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann

Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, National Heart Center, Mistri Wing, 17 Third Hospital Avenue, Singapore 168752.

Published: October 2008

Video-assisted thoracoscopic thymectomy is safe, but the efficacy of this technique in thymomectomy is unproved. Data of 103 consecutive patients who had thoracoscopic thymectomy and thymomectomy between 1998 and 2006 were retrospectively reviewed. Conventional monopolar diathermy and endoscopic Liga clips were used in the first 50 patients, and the Harmonic Scalpel was employed in the next 53. Only mean tumor size differed between groups (56.6 +/- 18.2 vs 40.0 +/- 20.8 mm in Harmonic Scalpel group). A similar number of patients had myasthenia gravis in the first group (72%) and Harmonic Scalpel group (83%). There were 49 thymomas (22 in first group, 27 in Harmonic Scalpel group). Of the earlier patients, 2 were re-explored for excessive chest tube drainage, 1 had ipsilateral phrenic nerve injury, and 2 had left phrenic nerves sacrificed intraoperatively due to thymoma invasion, but there was no significant difference in complications between groups. At a mean follow-up of 3.40 +/- 2.38 years (range, 0.04-8.52 years), there was 1 thymoma recurrence in the first group. Use of the Harmonic Scalpel in video-assisted thoracoscopic thymic resection is safe and confers some advantages over conventional methods of dissection.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/021849230801600505DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

harmonic scalpel
24
video-assisted thoracoscopic
12
scalpel group
12
scalpel video-assisted
8
thoracoscopic thymic
8
thoracoscopic thymectomy
8
group harmonic
8
harmonic
6
group
6
scalpel
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!