Left apicoposterior segmentectomy for lung cancer with displaced segmental bronchus: A case report

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Abstract

Background: Pulmonary segmentectomy can be challenging when thoracic surgeons encounter anatomical anomalies. A displaced left apicoposterior bronchus is a rare bronchial anomaly that makes lung anatomical resection challenging. We herein present a case of successful left apicoposterior segmentectomy for lung cancer in a patient with an anomalous segmental bronchus. Case presentation: A 70-year-old man was clinically diagnosed with early-stage lung cancer for which segmentectomy was indicated. A preoperative image revealed a displaced left apicoposterior bronchus that branched behind the left main pulmonary artery. With the aid of three-dimensional reconstruction imaging and systemic indocyanine green injection, we successfully performed left apicoposterior segmentectomy under complete video-assisted thoracic surgery. The pathological diagnosis was adenocarcinoma. The patient was alive without recurrence 8 months after segmentectomy. Conclusion: Preoperative three-dimensional imaging and systemic indocyanine green injection enabled us to successfully conduct challenging segmentectomy in a patient with an anomalous bronchus.

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APA

Yanagiya, M., Yamaguchi, H., Hiyama, N., & Matsumoto, J. (2020). Left apicoposterior segmentectomy for lung cancer with displaced segmental bronchus: A case report. Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-020-01328-3

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