Mayo P
Am Surg. 1985 Apr;51(4):230-6.
The present review deals with 63 adult patients having acute nontuberculous empyema treated by early thoracotomy and decortication, during the period from 1955 through 1979. Group I (38 patients) had postpneumonic empyema, but no underlying disease. Group II (25 patients) had acute empyema and one or more serious associated diseases. Positive cultures were present in 45 of 63 patients (71.4%). Most surgeons have customarily recommended conservative management, especially for patients in Group II, because of the supposedly "high risk" involved in decortication. Consequently, the mortality is extremely high. The empyema must be cured; a "well drained" or "controlled" empyema will not suffice. The severely ill patient can better withstand the ordeal of a major operation than the deleterious effects of a lingering empyema. The critically ill patient is best managed by the primary procedure of open thoracotomy and decortication. The author's experience confirms that such patients can expect an outlook (8% mortality) approaching the zero mortality of Group I patients.