Abstract

Bilateral transverse thoracosternotomy, known colloquially as "clamshell thoracotomy," provides quick and extensive exposure to the thoracic organs. The origins of the radical incision are unclear, and its influence on historical developments in surgery has not been elaborated. Transsternal extension to bilateral thoracotomy likely occurred during World War I and was designated as Tuffier's method by 1922. Théodore Tuffier had already solidified his reputation as a trailblazing thoracic surgeon in Paris when the French army summoned him to design triage systems for trauma patients during the Great War. Following World War II, cardiac surgery grew tremendously during the 1950s, and many pioneering open-heart procedures utilized the bilateral incision for safe exposures with satisfactory results. Median sternotomy became the incision of choice for open-heart surgery by the early 1960s; however, thoracotomy remained important to the trauma surgeon's repertoire. Transsternal conversion was only briefly mentioned in trauma literature through the 1980s, although up to one-half of reported emergency thoracotomies at busy trauma centers were clamshells. The moniker clamshell thoracotomy came in 1994 when thoracic surgical oncology and lung transplantation flourished with complex operations requiring larger incisions. The twenty-first century has brought two iterations of evidence-based guidelines for emergency thoracotomy, but incision choice has not been formally discussed. Renewed conversation in recent years has advocated for the clamshell as arguably the best approach for patients in extremis. Given these trends, the tortuous history of this controversial incision deserves attention.

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