T. Degiacomo et al., VIDEO-ASSISTED THORACOSCOPY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF RECURRENT SPONTANEOUS PNEUMOTHORAX, The European journal of surgery, 161(4), 1995, pp. 227-230
Objective: To present our experience of video-assisted thoracoscopy in
the treatment of recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax, and to compare t
he results with those of a historical control group treated by lateral
thoracotomy. Design: Prospective evaluation with historical controls.
Setting: Teaching hospital, Italy. Subjects: 41 Patients with recurre
nt spontaneous pneumothorax, 20 of whom were treated by video-assisted
thoracoscopy and 21 of whom underwent lateral thoracotomy (historical
control group). Main outcome measures: Duration of chest drainage, le
ngth of hospital stay, amount of narcotic analgesia required, postoper
ative complications, and recurrence during follow up. Results: The mea
n (range) duration of chest drainage in the group who underwent video-
assisted thoracoscopy was 5 days (4-7) compared with 7 days (4-13) in
the control group. the corresponding figures for length of hospital st
ay were 6 days (4-8) compared with 10 days (5-16). 3 Patients (15%) in
the thoracoscopy group required parenteral narcotic analgesia compare
d with 14 (66%) in the control group. and 2 (10%) developed minor comp
lications compared with 5 (24%). The mean length of follow up was 9 mo
nths (range 1-18) compared with 26 months (19-34), and no patient in e
ither group developed a recurrence. Conclusion: Our early results of t
reating recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax with video-assisted thoraco
scopy have been encouraging, and we have adopted it in preference to l
ateral thoracotomy.