Abstract

The advent in video-assisted thoracic surgery has rendered us to rely more and more on mechanical devices. We prospectively studied staple formation on resected lung specimen by radiography and attempted to correlate this with the clinical outcome. From February 1994 to January 1995, 36 consecutive pulmonary wedges (23 apical bullae, 12 pulmonary metastases, 1 tuberculoma) from 31 patients who had undergone resection by endoscopic staple-cutter (Endo GIA30, USSC) were examined by two-plane radiography for staple alignment and closure. Imperfect staple formation was found in 21 (58%) of resected specimens. The median size of the resected bullae is 4.2 mL (range, 2.0 to 58.8 mL) compared with 36 mL (range, 1.2 to 222.8 mL) in the resected metastases and tuberculoma specimen. Despite detecting more imperfect staples in the metastases group (77% vs 57%), there was little difference in the two groups with respect to postoperative chest drainage duration (median, 3 vs 2 days) or hospital stay (median, 2 vs 2 days). We conclude that the currently available endoscopic staplers are by no means perfect, especially for resection of larger specimens, even though this may not be apparent clinically. A continuous search for improvement in endoscopic staplers designed specifically for lung resection is needed.

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