Omentopexy and muscle transposition: two alternative methods in the treatment of pleural empyema and mediastinitis.

Thorac Cardiovasc Surg

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Endoscopy, Ruhrlandklinik, Essen-Heidhausen, Germany.

Published: August 1994

From March 1987 to March 1993, 64 patients with chronic empyema and mediastinitis were treated with omentum and thoracic muscle transposition. There were 36 male and 28 female patients, age range 29 to 76 years. 31 patients suffered from chronic empyema and bronchopleural fistula after lung surgery, 18 patients had chronic empyema after pulmonary inflammatory disease, and 15 patients developed a mediastinitis with or without pleural empyema after cardiac surgery or irradiation of the chest wall. The pedicled omentum was used in 33, the thoracic muscles latissimus dorsi, pectoralis major, serratus anterior, and trapezius either alone or combined in 31 cases. There were no perioperative deaths. Bronchopleural fistulas and infected spaces were successfully closed in 61 patients (95.3%). Postoperative CT scan, angiography, bronchoscopy, and lung function tests demonstrate the efficacy of both surgical methods. Omentum pedicle and thoracic muscle flaps supply excellent vascularised tissue to fill infected pleural space and mediastinum, particularly in patients with limited cardiopulmonary function.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2007-1016493DOI Listing

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