Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery
Anesthesia type |
General (rarely, monitored anesthesia care for selected cases) |
---|---|
Airway |
Double-lumen endotracheal tube |
Lines and access |
Adequate peripheral IV access; arterial line |
Monitors |
Standard with arterial monitoring |
Primary anesthetic considerations | |
Preoperative |
Pulmonary function testing, prehabilitation to optimize pulmonary status; consider appropriateness of thoracic epidural catheter |
Intraoperative |
One-lung ventilation |
Postoperative |
Pain control, pulmonary hygiene |
Article quality | |
Editor rating | |
User likes | 1 |
Anesthesia for minimally invasive, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) is similar to anesthesia for open thoracic cases in many respects. However, achieving lung isolation quickly and completely is even more important, since even a slightly inflated lung may obstruct the surgeon’s view. Procedures that are amenable to VATS include but are not limited to:
- Mediastinoscopy
- Wedge resection or lung biopsy
- Lobectomy or segmentectomy
- Pleurodesis, mechanical or talc, for pleural effusion or spontaneous pneumothorax
- Decortication, including evacuation of empyema or hemothorax
- Lung volume reduction for severe emphysema
- Thoracic sympathectomy for hyperhidrosis or treatment of refractory ventricular tachycardia
Any patient may be a candidate regardless of extremes of age or pulmonary disease. Procedures still requiring open thoracotomy include pneumonectomy, tracheal resection, and chest wall resection. The advantages of VATS include decreased hospital length of stay, decreased morbidity, and the ability to do more cases per day in each OR.
The keys to anesthesia success include:
- Facility with placing both right and left endobronchial tubes;
- Skill with fiberoptic bronchoscopy and thoracic epidural anesthesia;
- Having a dedicated team of personnel who routinely handle these cases;
- Hospital investment in a high-quality video laryngoscopy system.
Preoperative management
Patients may present for VATS in sound health or with substantial disease burden. A young patient who presents for thoracic sympathectomy for hyperhidrosis or bleb resection with mechanical pleurodesis for spontaneous pneumothorax may require no preoperative testing. At the opposite extreme, patients may present with decreased lung function on the affected side, pleural or pericardial effusion, anemia, poor nutritional status, and effects of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and/or radiation. Whenever possible, prehabilitation in preparation for surgery should be considered to correct anemia, improve nutritional status, and improve functional capacity.
Patient evaluation
System | Considerations |
---|---|
Neurologic | |
Cardiovascular | |
Respiratory | History of COPD, asthma, pleural effusion: adequacy of pulmonary function |
Gastrointestinal | |
Hematologic | |
Renal | |
Endocrine | |
Other |
Labs and studies
Operating room setup
Patient preparation and premedication
Regional and neuraxial techniques
Intraoperative management
Monitoring and access
Induction and airway management
Positioning
Maintenance and surgical considerations
Emergence
Postoperative management
Disposition
Pain management
Potential complications
Procedure variants
Variant 1 | Variant 2 | |
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Unique considerations | ||
Position | ||
Surgical time | ||
EBL | ||
Postoperative disposition | ||
Pain management | ||
Potential complications |
References
Top contributors: Karen S Sibert and Chris Rishel