Abstract

Lobar torsion is a rare, challenging diagnosis that requires a high index of suspicion and prompt investigation and management. Detection and urgent fixation or lung resection are critical to avoid catastrophic sequelae of lung necrosis, bronchopleural fistulae, and death. A case of lobar torsion following open repair of a type B aortic dissection and thoraco-abdominal aortic aneurysm in a patient with Marfan syndrome is presented. After a non-specific constellation of symptoms, the diagnosis was confirmed with computed tomography and bronchoscopic findings and the patient underwent detorsion and plication of a torted, yet viable, left upper lobe on post-operative day 6. The patient is currently being followed with serial imaging to follow a necrotic consolidation of the left upper lobe. This was a case of lobar torsion in a patient with Marfan syndrome and the degree of connective tissue disease may have predisposed the patient to this rare surgical complication. The case presents a challenging dilemma due to the risks associated with exposing a synthetic aortic graft to a potentially infected space if lobar resection or a pneumonectomy was performed.

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