Ayabe Takanori, Yoshioka M, Fukushima Y, Matsuzaki Y, Onitsuka T
Department of Surgery, Miyazakishigun-ishikai Hospital, Miyazaki, Japan.
Kyobu Geka. 2003 Nov;56(12):989-94; discussion 994-6.
It is difficult to determine what kind of appropriate operations should be applied for which phase of chronic empyema would be administered, especially for a surgical management. We report that the postoperative outcomes of the treatment should be recommended for chronic empyema with the aid of omental flap transposition. Seven cases of chronic empyema (the averaged age was 66.1 +/- 7.5, 6 males and 1 female) in our hospital were operated during from June 1993 to January 2001. The disease-carrying time was 3 to 16 months and the inflammation findings at the admission were positive in all cases. The cause of chronic empyema was pneumonia (n = 3), plombage for tuberculosis (n = 2), and postlobectomy empyema (n = 2). As the first-stage of treatment for empyema cavity, intrathoracic tube drainage and lavage were performed for all cases. The operative procedures were described as below; one-stage operation with both thoracostomy and omental flap transposition was performed after the first-stage treatment (n = 2), simple thoracostomy (n = 1), and two-stage operation with thoracotomy and omental flap transposition (n = 4). Three of the 4 cases with two-stage operation could be completely treated for 1 month interval. However, the rest one case had not been able to be radically cured, which empyema had been extensively turned for the worse for one month after the two-stage operation. Thoracostomy had been redone, and it took 8 months to be cured. All cases could be finally recovered and discharged. On the priority of treatment for chronic empyema, at first, both thoracic tube drainage and thoracostomy should be performed as a first-stage operation, and if they could not be effective, after the combined inflammation was settled down, then the omental flap transposition should be considered as a two-stage operation.