- Massive bleeding due to injury of large vessels, particularly caused by tumor infiltration or inflammatory adherent lymph nodes
- By compression using a swab, the situation can usually be controlled to the extent that, under continuous compression, the transition to thoracotomy can be managed in a controlled manner without excessive blood loss, and the information of anesthesia, preparation of further instruments, and, if necessary, the organization of adequate assistance is possible. Blind clamping and suturing attempts generally increase the damage.
- Parenchymal lesions of the lung during mobilization or in the area of staple lines, especially with obliterated interlobar fissure
- The attempt at suturing is often futile in vulnerable lung tissue or emphysematous lung. Here, the use of staple line reinforcement or a sealing matrix is helpful.
- In individual cases, the surgeon must decide, based on the anesthesiologist's information about the fistula volume, whether a conservative therapy with chest drainage is also justifiable.
- Injury to the contralateral pleura
- Especially during the preparation of infracarinal lymph nodes at station 7, unnoticed opening of the contralateral mediastinal pleura can lead to tension pneumothorax. It is important to recognize the situation and either open the pleura widely or insert a chest drain on the opposite side.
- Injury to the tracheal wall, main bronchi, or other segmental bronchi
- Injury to the vagus nerve, phrenic nerve, and recurrent laryngeal nerve
- Injury to the esophagus
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Intraoperative Complications
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Postoperative Complications
- Cardiac arrhythmia (10-15%)
- Lobe torsion (0.1-0.3%)
- In case of suspicion, immediate confirmation of diagnosis using CT imaging and surgical revision. If the rotated lobe still appears viable, a subpleural fixation suture to the adjacent lobe is possible. In cases of unclear viability or gangrene, the respective lobe must be removed.
- Postoperative bronchial stump insufficiency (0.5-4%)
- Early symptoms can include high fistula volumes, respiratory or cardiac decompensation, with purulent sputum and fever occurring later. Early confirmation of diagnosis using bronchoscopy is crucial for prognosis and course.
- In high-risk patients (neoadjuvant pre-treatment, diabetes mellitus, ipsilateral previous surgery), primary coverage of the bronchial stump with a pericardial fat pad is recommended.
- The therapy depends on the extent of the insufficiency and the timing of the diagnosis and can be either endoscopic or through re-operation.
- The treatment of a bronchial fistula or stump insufficiency is complex and should be performed at a specialized center.
- Persistent air fistula (from the 8th postoperative day, approximately 8-15%)
- A revision surgery due to a parenchymal fistula is very rarely required. Often, conservative therapy (with patience, suction release attempt, or chemical pleurodesis) is sufficient.
- Postoperative pleural empyema (0.1-2%)
- The most common cause is a persistent air fistula with contamination of the pleural cavity in the presence of a pre-existing immune deficiency.
- The therapy initially consists of sufficient drainage and antibiotic therapy. Surgical revision is often required in the case of a persistent bronchopleural fistula.
- The most important measures, in addition to the rapid initiation of therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics, are bronchial toilet and bronchoscopic material collection (microbiology) as well as intensive physiotherapy.
- Hemothorax (requiring transfusion or re-operation 1-4%)
- Immediate surgical revision in the case of 1L of bloody secretion in the first hour post-operation or persistent drainage volumes of 200-400ml/h in the first 5 hours post-operation.
- Chylothorax (0.5-1%)
- Initially conservative therapy using MCT diet or parenteral nutrition. If secretion persists for over 14 days, radiological intervention or surgery is indicated.
- Vocal cord paralysis (0-1%)
- Speech therapy and ENT medical co-management.
- Nerve lesions due to positioning injuries