Thoracoplasty: an obsolete procedure?
Article
in En
| IMSEAR
| ID: sea-30206
After the advent of chemotherapy for pulmonary tuberculosis, the operation of thoracoplasty became rare in the developed countries. However, this was not the case in developing countries like India. Between July 1992 and June 1997, we performed thoracoplasty in 139 patients. Indications of surgery were tubercular empyema (84 patients), pyogenic empyema (33 patients), post-operative empyema with bronchopleural fistula (8 patients), drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis (2 patients) and recurrent haemoptysis (2 patients). Successful outcome in the form of control of sepsis, closure of bronchopleural fistula, sputum conversion and control of haemoptysis was achieved in most cases. There were four deaths in the entire series. We conclude that with the persisting problem of pulmonary tuberculosis in the developing countries, thoracoplasty is still an operation of continued relevance.
Full text:
1
Index:
IMSEAR
Main subject:
Recurrence
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Thoracoplasty
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
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Female
/
Humans
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Male
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Retrospective Studies
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Adolescent
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Treatment Outcome
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Adult
Type of study:
Observational_studies
Language:
En
Year:
1999
Type:
Article