Surgical spectrum in the management of empyemas (original) (raw)

Comparison of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery and open surgery in the management of primary empyema

Current opinion in pulmonary medicine, 2011

Thoracic empyema is the accumulation of frank pus within the pleural cavity. Its cause is often multifactorial and may include direct contiguous spread of infection, penetrating chest trauma or an iatrogenic cause secondary to surgical instrumentation of the pleural space. Current management of empyema is based on local empirical practice as there is no consensus on an optimal regimen. Over the past decade, surgical management of empyema has attracted great interest, leading to specific recommendations.

Surgical Treatment of Pleural Empyema – Our Results

PRILOZI, 2017

Pleural infection is a frequent clinical condition. Prompt treatment has been shown to reduce morbidity, mortality and duration of hospital stay. Unfortunately, advanced stages of empyema need to use extensive surgery - decortications or thoracoplasty. Early recognition of the parapneumonic effusion and the adequate treatment with thoracentesis or pleural drainage, which is minimally invasive, is possible not to prograde the process and not to become empyema. Aim: To analyze the results of the surgical treatment in patients with empyema treated at Clinic for thoracic surgery. Material and methods: In the retrospective study we analyzed 234 patients with empyema which were treated at the Clinic for Thoracic Surgery in 5 year period (2011-2015). The mean age of the patients was 51.94 years. They were treated with pleural drainage, decortications or thoracoplasty. Results: With pleural drainage were treated 165/234 (70.51%) patients, of which successfully were finished 124/165 (75.15%)...

EACTS expert consensus statement for surgical management of pleural empyema

European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 2015

Pleural infection is a frequent clinical condition. Prompt treatment has been shown to reduce hospital costs, morbidity and mortality. Recent advances in treatment have been variably implemented in clinical practice. This statement reviews the latest developments and concepts to improve clinical management and stimulate further research. The European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS) Thoracic Domain and the EACTS Pleural Diseases Working Group established a team of thoracic surgeons to produce a comprehensive review of available scientific evidence with the aim to cover all aspects of surgical practice related to its treatment, in particular focusing on: surgical treatment of empyema in adults; surgical treatment of empyema in children; and surgical treatment of post-pneumonectomy empyema (PPE). In the management of Stage 1 empyema, prompt pleural space chest tube drainage is required. In patients with Stage 2 or 3 empyema who are fit enough to undergo an operative procedure, there is a demonstrated benefit of surgical debridement or decortication [possibly by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS)] over tube thoracostomy alone in terms of treatment success and reduction in hospital stay. In children, a primary operative approach is an effective management strategy, associated with a lower mortality rate and a reduction of tube thoracostomy duration, length of antibiotic therapy, reintervention rate and hospital stay. Intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy is a reasonable alternative to primary operative management. Uncomplicated PPE [without bronchopleural fistula (BPF)] can be effectively managed with minimally invasive techniques, including fenestration, pleural space irrigation and VATS debridement. PPE associated with BPF can be effectively managed with individualized open surgical techniques, including direct repair, myoplastic and thoracoplastic techniques. Intrathoracic vacuum-assisted closure may be considered as an adjunct to the standard treatment. The current literature cements the role of VATS in the management of pleural empyema, even if the choice of surgical approach relies on the individual surgeon's preference.

Video-assisted thoracic surgery in pleural empyema: predictors of complications and treatment failures

Acta medica Lituanica, 2015

Background. Empyema remains a challenging entity for thoracic surgeons. The aim of this study was to evaluate preoperative predictors for unsuccessful thoracoscopic empyemectomy and postoperative complications. Materials and methods. There were 71 patients prospectively included in the study during the period from January 2011 to June 2014 in whom we performed thoracoscopic empyemectomy. Two main outcomes were evaluated: conversion and complications. Preoperative factors that could predict these outcomes were analyzed. Results. Conversion to open thoracotomy was required in 25.4% of cases. Fourteen (19.7%) patients had postoperative complications. The multivariate analysis showed that the time of illness (odds ratio 1.1; confidence interval 1.1–1.2), normal temperature on admission (odds ratio 11.2; confidence interval 1.5–85.4) and frank pus found on thoracocentesis (odds ratio 6.9; confidence interval 1.6–29.4) had a significant influence on conversion from thoracoscopy to open th...

Minimally invasive thoracic surgery for empyema

Breathe

The widely accepted and still increasing use of video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) in pleuro-pulmonary pathology imposes the need to deal with two major pitfalls: the first is to avoid its unselective use, while the second relates to inappropriate rejection of VATS on the basis of “insufficient radicality”. Unlike a quite established role of VATS in lung cancer patients, in patients with pleural empyema, the role of VATS is less clearly defined. The current evidence about VATS in patients with pleural empyema could be summarised as follows: VATS is accepted as a useful treatment option for fibrinopurulent empyema, but the treatment failure rate increases with the increasing proportion of stage III empyema, necessitating further surgical options like thoracotomy and decortication. As both pulmonologists and surgeons deal with diagnosis and treatment of pleural empyema, this article is an attempt to highlight the existing evidence in a more user-friendly way in order to help pract...

Efficacy of Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) in the Treatment of Primary Pleural Empyema

Acta Informatica Medica, 2020

Background: Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) has recently occupied a significant place in the surgical treatment of primary pleural empyema (PPE). Patients with anamnesis shorter than 4 weeks have a good chance of being cured only by VATS. As it is not easy to define precisely the beginning of the disease, it is difficult to say strictly to which period VATS method will be successful in PPE treatment. Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of the VATS method in the surgical treatment of primary pleural empyema. Methods: The study included 50 patients with findings appropriate for PPE over a period of three years, in whom the VATS method was applied in the surgical treatment of pleural empyema. Results: The established total length of treatment was 13.56 ± 7.98 days and the length of hospital treatment after surgery was 9.90 ± 3.315. The duration of thoracic drainage was 8.06 ± 3.005. Treatment was completed by the primary procedure without additional interventions in 94% of patients. Based on the final outcome, all patients from the clinic were discharged as cured Conclusion: The best time to indicate surgical treatment by using VATS method is history of disease in duration of four weeks Debridement or VATS decortication method is safe and efficient surgical procedure, especially in the first two stages. It is recommended to use this method as the first surgical option for patients in early stages of the disease.

Surgical management of primary empyema of the pleural cavity: outcome of 81 patients

Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery, 2010

Postpneumonic empyema is the most common form of empyema thoracis and is still recognised as a major cause of morbidity and prolonged hospital stay. We reviewed 106 patients retrospectively who underwent surgical management of pleural empyema over a period of three years from August 2005. We identified 81 patients (76%) (58 males, mean age 52 years) with primary empyema and 25 patients (24%) with secondary empyema. The first group of patients with primary empyema was analysed. Twenty-nine patients (36%) had stage II empyema and 52 patients (64%) had stage III. The majority of stage II empyema patients underwent thoracoscopic debridement (28 patients) and one patient had open thoracotomy and debridement. Stage III patients underwent thoracoscopic decortication (32 patients) of those six patients (19%) were converted to open decortication, open decortication (19 patients) and fenestration (one patient). Mortality rate was 0% for all procedures. Median length of hospital stay was six d...

Clinical history and surgical management of parapneumonic empyema what is the role of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS)?

Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery, 2017

Pleural empyema represents a frequent disease, characterized sometimes by blurred and unspecific signs or symptoms but requiring timely diagnosis in order to plan the most appropriate therapeutic regimen. Several classifications have proposed and the most widely used is the American Thoracic Society (ATS) one, according to increasing severity depending of the extent of disease. Different therapeutic strategies such as conservative regimens (antibiotic therapy and chest tube placement) and surgical one (empyemectomy with pleural decortication) were applied. To this date, minimally invasive surgery is assuming an important role in the management of empyema and represents the gold standard in stage II disease and a valid alternative to the classical approach in stage III in absence of a complete obliteration of the pleural space. Aim of the work is to define, through a comprehensive review of literature, the role of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery according to limits and advantages compared to conservative methods and the most invasive surgical approaches.

Surgical treatment of pleural empyema according to disease stage

Medicinski arhiv, 2009

Para pneumonic effusions are often complications of bacterial pneumonia, occurring in 5-50% patients and in 15% cases it can progress into pleural empyema. Pleural empyema treatment includes drainage of pus, re-expansion of lung by using appropriate antibiotics. Surgical treatment covers implementation of certain thoracic drainage modifications, use of VATS techniques and thoracotomy with pleura decortications. Research has involved 100 patients with diagnosis and treatment of para pneumonic and meta pneumonic pleural empyema. Based on previously defined phase of pleural empyema it was determined which surgical procedures have been used in definitive treatment of pleural empyema. In case of 31,17% (24/77) patients it has been found that pre-clinical treatment lasted 31 days and longer, and 49,35% (38/77) patients have been admitted at Clinic after 11 to 30 days of pre-clinic treatment. Only in 19.48% (15/77) patients pre-clinic treatment lasted up to 10 days. 79% (79/100) patients w...

Is video-assisted thoracoscopic surgical decortication superior to open surgery in the management of adults with primary empyema?

Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery, 2010

A best evidence topic in thoracic surgery was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was whether video-assisted thoracoscopic surgical decortication (VATSD) might be superior to open decortication (OD) (or chest tube drainage) for the management of adults with primary empyema? Altogether 68 papers were found using the reported search, of which 14 represented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The authors, journal, date and country of publication, patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes and results of these papers are tabulated. We conclude that VATSD has superior outcomes for the treatment of persistent pleural collections in terms of postoperative morbidity, complications and length of hospital stay, and gives equivalent resolution when compared with OD. One study comparing VATSD and chest tube drainage of fibrinopurulent empyema found video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) had higher treatment success (91% vs. 44%; P&lt...