Complications and outcomes of thoracoscopic‐assisted lung lobectomy in dogs

Autor: Jacqueline E. Scott, Danielle A. Auzenne, Federico Massari, Ameet Singh, Victoria Donovan, Philipp D. Mayhew, Brad Case, Valery F. Scharf, Nicole Buote, Mandy L. Wallace
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Veterinary Surgery. 52:106-115
ISSN: 1532-950X
0161-3499
Popis: To describe complications and outcomes of dogs undergoing thoracoscopic-assisted (TA) lung lobectomy.Multi-institutional, retrospective study.Client-owned dogs (n = 30).Medical records of dogs that underwent TA lung lobectomy were reviewed. Signalment, bodyweight, clinical signs, imaging findings, surgical variables, complications, and short-term/long-term outcome were assessed. Thoracoscopic-assisted lung lobectomy was performed with a mini-thoracotomy.Twelve intraoperative complications were recorded in 11 dogs, 6 requiring conversion to open thoracotomy. Reasons for conversion were reported in 5/6 dogs and included adhesions (2), difficultly manipulating the lesion through the mini-thoracotomy (2), and acute oxygen desaturation (1). One lung ventilation was successful in 4 of the 7 dogs in which this was attempted. A linear stapling device (DST series Medtronic, Minneapolis, Minnesota) was used for lung lobe ligation in 14 dogs. Twenty-three dogs underwent surgery for a neoplastic lesion, with 19 of these being carcinoma. The median lesion size was 4.3 cm (range 1-10 cm); margins were clean, except in 1 dog. Complications were documented in 8 dogs prior to discharge, 5 of these being classified as mild. Twenty-nine dogs were discharged at a median of 47 h postoperatively (range 24-120 h). Death was reported in 9 dogs, with a median survival time of 168 days (range 70-868 days).Thoracoscopic-assisted lung lobectomy was achieved with few major complications in the population reported here. Dogs were able to be discharged from hospital quickly, with most surviving beyond the follow-up period.Thoracoscopic-assisted lung lobectomy may be considered to facilitate the excision of larger pulmonary lesions or to treat smaller dogs, in which a thoracoscopic excision may be technically more challenging.
Databáze: OpenAIRE