Saudi Journal of Anaesthesia (Jan 2017)

Anesthesia for minimally invasive chest wall reconstructive surgeries: Our experience and review of literature

  • Shagun Bhatia Shah,
  • Uma Hariharan,
  • Ajay Kumar Bhargava,
  • Laleng M Darlong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/sja.SJA_13_17
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 319 – 326

Abstract

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Minimal access procedures have revolutionized the field of surgery and opened newer challenges for the anesthesiologists. Pectus carinatum or pigeon chest is an uncommon chest wall deformity characterized by a protruding breast bone (sternum) and ribs caused by an overgrowth of the costal cartilages. It can cause a multitude of problems, including severe pain from an intercostal neuropathy, respiratory dysfunction, and psychologic issues from the cosmetic disfigurement. Pulmonary function indices, namely, forced expiratory volume over 1 s, forced vital capacity, vital capacity, and total lung capacity are markedly compromised in pectus excavatum. Earlier, open surgical correction in the form of the Ravitch procedure was followed. Currently, in the era of minimally invasive surgery, Nuss technique (pectus bar procedure) is a promising step in chest wall reconstructive surgery for pectus excavatum. Reverse Nuss is a corrective, minimally invasive surgery for pectus carinatum chest deformity. A tailor-made anesthetic technique for this new procedure has been described here based on the authors' personal experience and thorough review of literature based on Medline, Embase, and Scopus databases search.

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