Abstract

BackgroundIntraoperative contralateral pneumothorax during one-lung ventilation is a rare but life-threatening complication. Although the exact incidence is unknown, only 14 cases with this complication have been reported until now.Case presentationA 67-year-old Japanese man with a weight of 80 kg, height of 162.2 cm, and body mass index of 30.4 kg/m2 underwent three-port video-assisted thoracic surgery for lung cancer with one-lung ventilation. He had suffered from traumatic right rib fractures 6 weeks before the referral. Fifteen minutes before the end of the surgery, the systolic blood pressure suddenly dropped to about 50 mmHg, which was immediately recovered by intravenous injection of phenylephrine. This episode occurred during chest closure after the completion of the left upper lobectomy, and one-lung ventilation was soon switched to two-lung ventilation. Contralateral tension pneumothorax was noted by the postoperative chest x-ray. As the patient was complicated with obesity and a past history of rib fractures, increased airway pressure during one-lung ventilation related to obesity together with the persistent compression of the visceral pleura by the fractured ends of the ribs was considered to be the factors responsible for this critical complication.ConclusionsPatient backgrounds such as obesity and past history of rib fractures should be noted carefully as risk factors for intraoperative contralateral pneumothorax during one-lung ventilation. We present the clinical course and discuss the mechanism of development of this potentially life-threatening complication in the present case with a review of the literature.

Highlights

  • Intraoperative contralateral pneumothorax during one-lung ventilation is a rare but life-threatening complication

  • 14 cases, only 2 case reports were found with minimally invasive surgeries including a case with robotic-assisted thoracic surgery (RATS) and the other with videoassisted thoracic surgery (VATS)

  • As one-lung ventilation (OLV) is an indispensable technique for lung resection with RATS and VATS, and pneumothorax during OLV is a life-threatening complication that requires prompt diagnosis and treatment, anesthesiologists and surgeons should keep the risk of this complication in mind during surgery despite its rarity

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Summary

Conclusions

We present a case with contralateral tension pneumothorax during VATS with OLV in a patient with obesity and a past history of rib fractures.

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