Bilateral lung herniation with parenchymal infarction following clamshell thoracotomy for lobar lung transplantation: a case report
Janis Tavandžis, René Novysedlák, Jiří Pozniak, Monika Švorcová, František Mošna, Jaromír Vajter, Zuzana Ozaniak Střížová, Vojtěch Suchánek, Jan Šimonek, Jiří Vachtenheim, Robert Lischke

TL;DR
A rare case of bilateral lung herniation after lung transplant surgery is reported, highlighting the importance of CT scans for diagnosis.
Contribution
This case report presents a rare complication of bilateral lung herniation following lobar lung transplantation.
Findings
Bilateral lung herniation occurred after clamshell thoracotomy for lobar lung transplantation.
CT scans were crucial for diagnosing herniation despite no palpable chest abnormalities.
Surgical intervention was required to address infarction and reposition the herniated lung tissue.
Abstract
Pulmonary hernia is a rare condition characterized by the protrusion of lung tissue through a chest wall defect. Trauma and thoracic surgery are the most common causes of acquired lung hernias. We present an unusual case of (sequential) bilateral lung herniation with parenchymal infarction after bilateral lobar lung transplantation. A 50-year-old female, wait-listed as high-urgency candidate, with a body mass index (BMI) of 29 kg/m2 underwent a bilateral lobar lung transplantation for pulmonary fibrosis through a clamshell thoracotomy approach. Due to a size mismatch, stapler resection of the segment 3 and the middle lobe of the right lung, as well as an upper left lobectomy was required. The chest was closed with 3 braided non-absorbable pericostal sutures on each side. Sternal osteosynthesis was performed with a titanium sternal splint along with 7 self-tapping screws with a length…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCongenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Studies · Tracheal and airway disorders · Trauma Management and Diagnosis
