• Masui · Feb 2012

    Case Reports

    [Difficulty in left-sided double-lumen tube placement in patients undergoing surgical graft replacement of the descending aorta is predicted from tracheobronchial compression].

    • Satoko Uemura, Kyosuke Sugiyama, Yoshikazu Inoue, Sasagu Hamada, Ryo Katsuki, Yoshinori Maeda, and Mikio Nakashima.
    • Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Saga University, Saga 849-8501.
    • Masui. 2012 Feb 1;61(2):138-42.

    BackgroundIn surgical graft replacement of the descending aorta graft, one-lung ventilation (OLV) is required to provide adequate surgical view and to allow removal of blood from the left lung. It is best to use a double-lumen tube (DLT) to assure OLV but it is sometimes difficult to place the left-sided DLT due to thoracic aneurysm or the dissection lumen. We retrospectively investigated tracheobronchial anatomy by chest X-ray and chest computed tomography (CT) in 29 cases of descending aorta replacement to determine how best to manage difficult placement of the left-sided DLT.MethodsFrom our database of 29 patients who had undergone descending aorta replacement between February 1, 2005, and December 31, 2009, we investigated the association between difficulty in placing the left-sided DLT and tracheobronchial anatomy by chest X-ray and CT.ResultsWe could not place a left-sided DLT in 3 of 29 cases. Two of these cases were planned surgery for aortic aneurysm and the other was an emergency operation for acute aortic dissection. We could manage the two cases safely using a right-sided DLT. We compared chest X-ray and chest CT images of these 3 cases with the other 26 cases and found that compression of the tracheobronchial tree was prevalent in the cases of difficult placement of the left-sided DLT.ConclusionsWe experienced difficulty in placement of the left-sided DLT in 3 of 29 cases of descending aorta replacement. We can predict difficulty of left-sided DLT placement by the presence of compression of the tracheobronchial tree on chest CT.

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