Abstract

Evaluation of the efficiency of our technique of methylene-blue labelling of pulmonary nodules to facilitate thoracoscopic recognition and excision. Patients with a peripheral pulmonary nodule smaller than 2.5 cm and not in contact with the visceral pleura were included. Under tomodensitometric guidance, the nodules were labelled with methylene-blue within hours before thoracoscopic wedge resection. If frozen section revealed a primary bronchial carcinoma, thoracotomy and classical resection were performed during the same anesthesia. Between July 1992 and August 1996, 54 nodules were removed in 51 patients. Labelling was performed between 75 and 270 min before surgery and was complicated in 13 patients (25.4%) by a small pneumothorax without any clinical consequence. Labelling allowed successful thoracoscopic recognition of 50 nodules (92%) and thoracoscopic wedge resection was possible in all but one cases (91%). Five patients (9%) required thoracotomy. Histology showed a benign lesion in 22 cases, a primary lung carcinoma in 17 and a metastases in 15. Twenty of the 22 benign nodules (91%) were removed without thoracotomy. According to the protocol, 13 patients with a primary lung tumour underwent lobectomy during the same session. There was no mortality nor morbidity amongst patients who had thoracoscopy only. Our technique of labelling peripheral pulmonary nodules with methylene-blue is very effective and is not associated with any relevant complication. Thoracoscopic excision and diagnosis is possible in more than 90% of the cases. We therefore recommend this simple, low-cost and reliable technique for nodules not in contact with the visceral pleura before thoracoscopic wedge resection.

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