Abstract

Today, in spite of the developments in imaging methods and antibiotherapy, childhood pleural empyema is a prominent cause of morbidity and mortality. In recent years, it has been shown that there has been an increase in the frequency of pleural empyema in children, and antibiotic resistance in microorganisms causing pleural empyema has made treatment difficult. Despite the many studies investigating thoracoscopic debridement and fibrinolytic treatment separately in the management of this disease, there is are not enough studies comparing these two treatments. The aim of this study was to prospectively compare the efficacy of two different treatment methods in stage II and III empyema cases and to present a perspective for treatment options.We excluded from the study cases with: i) thoracoscopic intervention and fibrinolytic agent were contraindicated; ii) immunosuppression or additional infection focus; iii) concomitant diseases, those with bronchopleural fistula diagnosed radiologically, and Stage I cases. This gave a total of 54 cases: 23 (42.6%) in stage II, and 31 (57.4%) cases in stage III. These patients were randomized into two groups of 27 cases each for debridement or fibrinolytic agent application by video-assisted thoracoscopic decortication (VATS). The continuity of symptoms after the operation, duration of thoracic tube in situ, and the length of hospital stay in the VATS group were of significantly shorter duration than in the streptokinase applications (P=0.0001). In 19 of 27 cases (70.37%) in which fibrinolytic treatment was applied and in 21 cases of 27 (77.77%) in which VATS was applied, the lung was fully expanded and the procedure was considered successful. There was no significant difference with respect to success rates between the two groups (P=0.533). The complication rate in our cases was 12.96% and no mortality was observed. Similar success rates in thoracoscopic drainage and enzymatic debridement, and the low cost of enzymatic drainage both served to highlight intrapleural streptokinase treatment as a reliable method in reducing the need for surgery in complicated empyema.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWhen pleural effusion is treated with appropriate antibiotics, it generally recovers spontaneous-

  • Received for publication: 10 June 2011.Ufuk Cobanoglu, Fuat Sayır, Salim Bilici, Mehmet Melek, Abidin Şehitoğlu, Van State Hospital Department of Thoracic Surgery, Van, Bacterial pneumonia in children is frequently complicated by pleural effusion and its incidence varies between 20 and 91%.1-3 When pleural effusion is treated with appropriate antibiotics, it generally recovers spontaneous-Revision received: 23 July 2011

  • Stroke or manifest hemorrhage having occurred in the previous six months and those who had used fibrinolytic agents for any reason in the previous two years were excluded from the fibrinolytic treatment group

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Summary

Introduction

When pleural effusion is treated with appropriate antibiotics, it generally recovers spontaneous-. 2011 fibrin deposition, the accumulation of bacteri- Licensee PAGEPress, Italy al products and leukocytes in the pleural cavity Pediatric Reports 2011; 3:e29 and complicated parapneumonic effusion doi:10.4081/pr.2011.e29

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