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Department of Anaesthesia, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Chang Gung University, Taoyuan, Taiwan
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Ming-Hwang Shyr, MD, PhD, Department of Anaesthesia, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taoyuan 333-33, Taiwan. Address e-mail to an001{at}adm.cgmh.org.tw
| Abstract |
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IMPLICATIONS: We report a 47-yr-old patient who underwent surgery for esophageal cancer. Because of the isolated ventilation of the right upper lobe after occlusion of the right mainstem bronchus, bronchoscopic re-confirmation exposed an aberrant tracheal bronchus. A Fogarty tube was introduced to block the tracheal bronchus and provide one-lung ventilation.
| Introduction |
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| Case Report |
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In the operating room, after routine monitors were placed, the patient received general anesthesia with IV atropine, fentanyl, thiopental, and vecuronium. A flexible fiberoptic bronchoscope was used as a guide to pass a Univent tube (inner diameter, 6.0 mm) through the right mouth angle into the trachea. The right mainstem bronchus was identified and blocked with a Univent bronchial blocker. A right thoracotomy was performed. Unfortunately, the right upper lobe was still inflated during mechanical ventilation, although the right middle and lower lobes were successfully collapsed. The position of the bronchial blocker was reconfirmed by bronchoscopy. Accidentally, we found an ectopic opening from the tracheal wall. Aberrant tracheal bronchus was suspected (Fig. 1). The surgeon requested complete lung collapse. We inserted a 6F Fogarty catheter through the left nostril to the opening of the tracheal bronchus, which had been tied together with the fiberoptic bronchoscope with a retractable knot. We successfully blocked the right upper lobe bronchus by inflation of the Fogarty catheter. The airway pressure under one-lung ventilation was up to 31 cm H2O, and no desaturation was noted through the procedure. The surgical procedure proceeded uneventfully with good visualization of the operative field.
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| Discussion |
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The tracheal bronchus is an aberrant, accessory, or ectopic bronchial branch arising directly from the lateral wall of the trachea above the carina, with an incidence ranging from 0.1% to 2% (4). It occurs almost exclusively on the right side, involves the right upper lobe, and usually represents a displaced origin of the right main bronchus or apical segmental bronchus (5). Most cases of tracheal bronchus are asymptomatic, like our patient, but some patients may experience recurrent pneumonia, chronic bronchitis, or bronchiectasis (4). Although it is usually of little clinical significance, this atypical origin of the right upper lobe bronchus may complicate one-lung ventilation during thoracic surgery (6).
The combination of a Fogarty catheter with a double-lumen endotracheal tube may be practically used to provide excellent lung separation and obviate the need to re-intubate the patients trachea (7). In this case, we used a Univent tube instead of a double-lumen endotracheal tube with a Fogarty catheter and provided excellent lung separation. Advantages of placing a Fogarty catheter within a Univent tube may include the ability to deflate/inflate a lung on the operative side, easier placement in patients with difficult airways, and avoiding the need for exchanging a double-lumen tube for a single-lumen tube when postoperative mechanical ventilation is planned. Although the combined use of a Fogarty catheter with a Univent tube is not a routine practice, it was useful in this patient who had an unanticipated tracheal anatomical anomaly. The case also illustrates the importance of a careful and thorough bronchoscopic examination to detect any tracheal bronchus anomaly before positioning for surgery.
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