The authors review the main methods designed to evaluate operability and surgical risk in candidates for chest surgery. They also report on their own experience with 135 cases operated on for thoraco-pulmonary diseases requiring surgery; in these cases, postoperative complications were studied in relation to various respiratory parameters evaluated differentially and as a whole prior to surgery. This study enabled the investigators to establish that patients with CV, FEV1, FEF25-75 and Tiffffeneau Index values below 60% of the respective theoretical reference values run a very substantial risk of postoperative complications, with a post-surgical morbidity rate of more than 60% in such patients. Similar risks are run by patients with VR values below 60% or above 120% of predicted values or with Emphysema Index values above 120% of predicted values. The author's experience with fractional bronchospirometry revealed that, in the high-risk patient sample, a predicted postoperative FEV1 value of only 800 ml/sec is a poorly selective limit.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!