Abstract

### Key points Lung isolation is required for a wide variety of pathology in paediatric patients. The varying size of the paediatric airway and size limitations of each lung isolation device poses a challenge to paediatric anaesthesiologists. The need for lung isolation includes: the prevention of contamination of one lung from the other due to haemorrhage or infection, the need to control the distribution of ventilation secondary to a bronchopulmonary fistula, a lung cyst or bullae, or severe hypoxaemia from unilateral lung disease. Extensive bronchopulmonary lavage may also necessitate lung isolation. Although lung isolation can assist in surgical exposure, in the paediatric population, surgical exposure for lung resections, mediastinal exposure, and thorascopy can often be accomplished by the CO2 pneumothorax and retraction of the operative lung without the need for lung isolation. This is most common in the young patient (<2 yr of age). Slinger1 teaches that there are the ‘ABCs’ of adult lung isolation: anatomy, bronchoscopy, and chest imaging. In paediatric lung isolation, there are still all the same ‘ABC’ considerations, with the addition of ‘D’—the varying diameter of the paediatric airway with age. ### Anatomy It has been long established that there are differences between the paediatric …

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