AI Article Synopsis

  • A case is presented where a patient developed a large left-sided carbon dioxide pneumothorax during laparoscopic surgery due to a congenital diaphragm defect.
  • Intraoperative imaging confirmed CO2 gas escape into the pleural cavity, leading to manageable respiratory and hemodynamic issues.
  • The condition was effectively treated conservatively by releasing the gas without needing a chest tube or transitioning to open surgery, thanks to CO2's high solubility and the patient's stable condition.

Article Abstract

During laparoscopic surgery, carbon dioxide (CO2) pneumothorax can develop due to a congenital defect in the diaphragm. We present a case of a spontaneous massive left-sided pneumothorax that occurred during laparoscopy-assisted gastrectomy, because of an escape of intraperitoneal CO2 gas, under pressure, into the pleural cavity through a congenital defect in the esophageal hiatus of the left diaphragm. This was confirmed on intraoperative chest radiography and laparoscopic inspection. This CO2 pneumothorax caused tolerable hemodynamic and respiratory consequences, and was rapidly reversible after release of the pneumoperitoneum. Thus, a conservative approach was adopted, and the remainder of the surgery was completed, laparoscopically. Due to the high solubility of CO2 gas and the extra-pulmonary mechanism, CO2 pneumothorax with otherwise hemodynamically stable conditions can be managed by conservative modalities, avoiding unnecessary chest tube insertion or conversion to an open procedure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4754276PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4097/kjae.2016.69.1.88DOI Listing

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