Swiss Medical Weekly (Apr 2019)

Establishing a non-intubated thoracoscopic surgery programme for bilateral uniportal sympathectomy

  • Claudio Caviezel,
  • Rolf Schuepbach,
  • Bastian Grande,
  • Isabelle Opitz,
  • Marco Zalunardo,
  • Walter Weder,
  • Sven Hillinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4414/smw.2019.20064
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 149, no. 1516

Abstract

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AIM OF THE STUDY Non-intubated, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (NiVATS) has been successfully developed in several centres worldwide. Local anaesthesia techniques and techniques to perform thoracoscopic surgery on a spontaneously breathing lung are the two key elements which must be adopted to establish a NiVATS programme. We established NiVATS by performing bilateral, uniportal sympathectomies, and compared it to classical video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) under general anaesthesia with double-lumen intubation. METHODS Ten consecutive bilateral VATS sympathectomies were compared with ten consecutive NiVATS procedures. Nineteen of the procedures were for palmar hyperhidrosis and one was for facial blushing. Duration of anaesthesia, surgery and hospitalisation, perioperative complications, side effects and quality of life before and after sympathectomy were analysed. RESULTS Median age was 26.5 years (range 17–55) and mean BMI in the NiVATS group was 21.8 (range 19.1–26.3). NiVATS sympathectomies were performed as outpatient procedures significantly more often (9/10 vs 3/10, p = 0.008). Quality of life was significantly increased after sympathectomy in all patients, with no significant differences between the NiVATS and the VATS groups. There were no differences between the two groups regarding compensatory sweating (40 vs 50%, p = 0.66). The duration of anaesthesia, not including the time required for the surgery, was significantly shorter in the NiVATS group (p <0.001). The duration of surgery, from the first local anaesthesia until the last skin suture, was significantly longer in the NiVATS group (p = 0.04), but showed a constant decline during the learning curve, from 95 minutes initially to 48 minutes for the last procedure. Costs were significantly lower in the NiVATS group (p = 0.04). CONCLUSION Thoracoscopic sympathectomy is a suitable procedure with which to establish a NiVATS programme. Patients are usually young and of healthy weight, facilitating the learning curve for the local anaesthesia techniques and the surgery. Compared to VATS, sympathectomy is more likely to be performed as an outpatient procedure and has a lower cost, while safety and efficacy are maintained.

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