Kyobu geka. The Japanese journal of thoracic surgery
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Atrial rupture without other major injury following blunt chest trauma is rare, but carries high mortality rate. Here we report 3 cases of blunt atrial rupture. All patients presented with hypotension and loss of consciousness. ⋯ In most reported cases, the cardiac tear has been repaired without using cardiopulmonary bypass. However, it is difficult to diagnose location of the tear, therefore, the repair became safer using cardiopulmonary bypass for the patients with cardiogenic shock. This article has described the mechanisms and generation of blunt chest trauma lesions.
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A surgically treated case of infectious endocarditis (IE) complicated with preoperative cerebral infarction and rupture of mycotic intracranial aneurysm was reported. A 66-year-old male was admitted with the diagnosis of active IE due to Streptococcus sanguis, complicated with cerebral infarction 17 days previously. Preoperative echocardiography showed mobile vegetations both on the aortic and the mitral leaflet, sizes of which were 12.6 and 25 mm. ⋯ There were mobile vegetations on the aortic and the mitral leaflet. There were no new neurological findings after operation. The duration between the cranial surgery and the cardiac surgery was thought to be important to prevent the new neurological complication.
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Case Reports
[Thoracoscopic clipping of the thooracic duct for chylothorax following esophagectomy: report of a case].
Thoracoscopic clipping of the thoracic duct was successfully performed for the treatment of postoperative chylothorax. Chylothorax occurred in a 67-year-old man following an esophagectomy for esophageal cancer. ⋯ Generally, chylothorax complicated by an esophagectomy has been managed by medical treatment first, followed by surgical intervention in case of uncontrollable pleural effusion. We think you should try this method at first in case chylothorax was able to be treated with not thoracotomy but thoracoscopic surgery: minimal invasiveness.
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We reviewed our experience on postoperative lobar torsion. From January 1994 to December 2003, 1002 patients underwent lobectomy for lung cancer. Two (0.2%) patients with postoperative lobar torsion required surgical reintervention. ⋯ Pulmonary lobar torsion poses a difficult diagnostic dilemma in the early postoperative period after the pulmonary resection. Since late reoperation for postoperative lobar torsion sometimes results in poor prognosis, careful observation with bronchial fiberscopy as well as chest radiography is necessary for accurate diagnosis. Rethoracotomy should be carried out without any delay in cases of lobar torsion following pulmonary resection.
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A 65-year-old man and a 51-year-old man underwent mitral valve repair for commissural prolapse due to infective endocarditis. On the occasion of repairing, folding plasty technique was employed to avoid relatively large annular plication after leaflet resection. Postoperative echocardiography showed no residual regurgitation and sufficient orifice area of the mitral valve. Folding plasty technique appeared to be simple and useful for repairing commissural prolapse due to infective endocarditis.