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ISSN: 1731-5530
Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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2/2011
vol. 8
 
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Oesophagectomy in a pneumonectomized patient: a case report

Mohammad-Reza Farahnak
,
Mehran Peyvasteh
,
Shahnam Askarpour
,
Seyed Saheb Hoseini Nejad

Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska 2011; 8 (2): 231–233
Online publish date: 2011/07/05
Article file
- 16_Peyvasteh.pdf  [0.82 MB]
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Introduction



Surgery of the oesophagus and lung in one patient is not a common procedure and is a surgical challenge to the thoracic surgeon. Surgery may be simultaneous or with an interval according to the patient’s medical condition. Two cases of simultaneous oesophagectomy and pneumonectomy have been reported [1]. One case was on the left and the other on the right. One case of simultaneous left pneumonectomy and subtotal oesophagectomy has been reported. One case of thoracoscopicoesophagopneumonectomy has been reported [2]. Another two cases with simultaneous pneumonectomy and oesophagectomy have been reported by Prauer et al. [3]. Simultaneous surgery or pneumonectomy after previous oesophagectomy may not be technically challenging but oesophagectomy in a pneumonectomized patient due to mediastinal shift is technically challenging. THE after pneumonectomy, because of dense mediastinal adhesions and fibrosis, is increasingly hazardous. While transthoracic oesophagectomy through left thoracotomy in non-pneumonectomized patients entails more difficulty than through right thoracotomy, this approach in left pneumonectomized patients is theoretically impossible. Due to some spaces in right pneumonectomy, oesophagectomy through the right transthoracic approach is more feasible than in left pneumonectomy through the left transthoracic approach. The former approach can expose the patient to respiratory insufficiency and the latter because of severe mediastinal shift and close proximity of the pericardium to the ribs may be impossible. To address these issues, we report transhiataloesophagectomy (THE) in a patient presenting with mid-portion oesophageal cancer and a history of left pneumonectomy for tuberculosis. The anatomical and physiological changes in pneumonectomized patients undergoing oesophagectomy are discussed.



Case presentation



A 77-year-old man, a heavy smoker with a history of left pneumonectomy due to tuberculosis infection, 11 years ago, presented with grade 3-4 dysphagia. Barium swallow and upper GI endoscopy were performed and biopsies were taken from an ulcerated mass in the middle third portion of the oesophagus (Fig. 1). They revealed squamous cell carcinoma. The clinical TNM staging was T3N0M0 and pathological TNM was T3N1M0. Abdominal sonography was normal. Chest X-ray was compatible with left side pneumonectomy (Fig. 2). CT scan of the chest and upper abdomen showed the pericardium in close proximity to the ribs fully filling the left hemithorax, an oesophageal mass with some pressure effect on the left atrium in front of the aorta and no distant metastases (Fig. 3A–B). Pulmonary function test revealed forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) of 1.3 L (63% predicted), and forced vital capacity (FVC) of 1.34 L (51% predicted). Ejection fraction was 50%. THE was performed after general anaesthesia, in the supine position midline laparotomy was performed, the stomach and duodenum were released and, by opting a transhiatal approach, blunt dissection of the distal oesophagus in spite of dense adhesions in the left hemithorax was accomplished. The pericardium and the heart were adjacent to the lateral chest wall because of clockwise rotation of the mediastinum. The oesophagus was identified in the posterior mediastinum and oesophagectomy was completed. In the cervical portion, the trachea had severe deviation to the left and finger dissection was too difficult. The mobilized stomach was brought through the hiatus and anastomosed to the cervical oesophagus. Cervical gastroesophageal anastomosis was hand made, end to end, two layer anastomosis with interrupted sutures. Transhiataloesophagectomy is not R0 resection. Lymphadenectomy was not performed in transhiatal resection. A Penrose rubber drain and a chest tube were used for the neck and right hemithorax respectively. The patient was monitored under mechanical ventilation for five days. The patient was weaned and extubated after passing a course of high-output renal failure. On day seven oral feeding was resumed.



Conclusion



Oesophagectomy is safe and feasible in pneumonectomized patients. Because of possible respiratory problems in the right transthoracic approach and technical problems

in the left transthoracic approach, our preference in left pneumonectomized patients is THE.

References



1. Reardon MJ, Estrera AL, Conklin LD, Reardon PA, Burnicardi FC, Beall AC. Esophagectomy after pneumonectomy: a surgical challenge. Ann Thorac Surg 2000; 69: 286-288.

2. Matsubara T, Ueda M, Takahashi T, Nakajima T, Nishi M. Surgical treatment of cancer of the thoracic esophagus in association with a major pulmonary operation. J Am Coll Surg 1997; 185: 520-524.

3. Präuer HW, Barthlen W, Siewert JR. Simultaneous pneumonectomy and esophagectomy for bronchial carcinoma. Eur J Cardio-Thor Surg 1991; 5: 334-335.
Copyright: © 2011 Polish Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons (Polskie Towarzystwo KardioTorakochirurgów) and the editors of the Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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