V-Shaped Incision of the Proximal Cartilage for High-Caliber Mismatch in Bronchoplasty
Yukio Watanabe, Aritoshi Hattori, Mariko Fukui, Takeshi Matsunaga, Kazuya Takamochi, Hisashi Tomita, Kenji Suzuki

TL;DR
A V-shaped incision in the proximal cartilage helps fix size mismatches during bronchoplasty, especially in right sleeve pneumonectomy.
Contribution
Introduces a novel V-shaped cartilage incision technique to address high-caliber mismatch in bronchoplasty.
Findings
The V-shaped incision technique was used in 12 patients with no anastomotic complications.
The technique was significantly more common in right sleeve pneumonectomy cases.
The method allows better adjustment of high-caliber mismatch during bronchial anastomosis.
Abstract
The problem of high-caliber mismatch in bronchoplasty is not uncommon. This report describes a technique using a V-shaped proximal cartilage incision to adjust high-caliber mismatch. Among 255 patients who underwent tracheoplasty or bronchoplasty at a single institution (Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan) between February 2008 and December 2022, 12 patients (4.7%) who underwent bronchoplasty with a proximal cartilage V-shaped incision for the adjustment of high-caliber mismatch were investigated. Bronchial anastomosis was performed using a continuous running monofilament suture at the bottom of the cartilage. Interrupted 3-0 or 4-0 monofilament sutures were used for the remaining cartilaginous tissue. Before completing the cartilaginous suture, a V-shaped incision was made in the proximal cartilage at the junction of the membranous portion. The cartilage and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTracheal and airway disorders · Voice and Speech Disorders · Lung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
