BMC Surgery (Sep 2020)

Pneumoperitoneum-induced pneumothorax during laparoscopic living donor hepatectomy: a case report

  • Min Suk Chae,
  • Jueun Kwak,
  • Kyungmoon Roh,
  • Minhee Kim,
  • Sungeun Park,
  • Ho Joong Choi,
  • Jaesik Park,
  • Jung-Woo Shim,
  • Hyung Mook Lee,
  • Yong-Suk Kim,
  • Young Eun Moon,
  • Sang Hyun Hong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12893-020-00868-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background We present a living donor case with an unexpected large-volume pneumothorax diagnosed using lung ultrasound during a laparoscopic hepatectomy for liver transplantation (LT). Case presentation A 38-year-old healthy female living donor underwent elective laparoscopic right hepatectomy. The preoperative chest radiography (CXR) and computed tomography images were normal. The surgery was uneventfully performed with tolerable CO2 insufflation and the head-up position. SpO2 decreased and airway peak pressure increased abruptly after beginning the surgery. There were no improvements in the SpO2 or airway pressure despite adjusting the endotracheal tube. Eventually, lung ultrasound was performed to rule out a pneumothorax, and we verified the stratosphere sign as a marker for the pneumothorax. The surgeon was asked to temporarily hold the surgery and cease with the pneumoperitoneum. Portable CXR verified a large right pneumothorax with a small degree of left lung collapse; thus, a chest tube was inserted on the right side. The hemodynamic parameters fully recovered and were stable, and the surgery continued laparoscopically. The surgeon explored the diaphragm and surrounding structures to detect any defects or injuries, but there were no abnormal findings. The postoperative course was uneventful, and a follow-up CXR revealed complete resolution of the two-sided pneumothorax. Conclusion This living donor case suggests that a pneumothorax can occur during laparoscopic hepatectomy due to the escape of intraperitoneal CO2 gas into the pleural cavity. Because missing the chance to identify a pneumothorax early significantly decreases the safety for living donors, point-of-care lung ultrasound may help attending physicians reach the final diagnosis of an intraoperative pneumothorax more rapidly and to plan the treatment more effectively.

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