Optimization of surgical approach for thoracoscopic-assisted pulmonary surgery in dogs

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Abstract

Objective: To determine the optimal intercostal space (ICS) to perform thoracoscopic-assisted lung lobectomy. Study design: Cadaveric study. Animals: Six mature, medium-sized canine cadavers. Methods: Cadavers were placed in right or left lateral recumbency. A 15-mm thoracoscopic cannula was inserted in the middle third of the 9th or 10th ICS. A wound retraction device was placed into a 7-cm minithoracotomy incision created in the middle third of the 4th-7th ICS on the left side and the 4th-8th ICS on the right side. The pulmonary ligaments were sectioned by using a combined intracorporeal and extracorporeal technique. Each lung lobe was sequentially withdrawn from the wound retraction device at the respective ICS and side. A thoracoabdominal stapler was positioned to simulate lung lobectomy, and the distance from the stapler anvil to the hilus was measured. Results: Simulated thoracoscopic-assisted lung lobectomy performed at left or right ICS 4 and 5, compared with other ICS evaluated, resulted in a significantly shorter median distance from the stapler anvil to the pulmonary hilus of the left cranial and caudal lung lobes and right cranial and middle lung lobes, respectively (all P

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Singh, A., Scott, J., Case, J. B., Mayhew, P. D., & Runge, J. J. (2019). Optimization of surgical approach for thoracoscopic-assisted pulmonary surgery in dogs. Veterinary Surgery, 48(S1), O99–O104. https://doi.org/10.1111/vsu.13128

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