Annals of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
Online ISSN : 2186-1005
Print ISSN : 1341-1098
ISSN-L : 1341-1098
Case Report
A Case of Incidentally Discovered Congenital Complete Pericardial Defect during Lobectomy for Lung Cancer: A Case Report and Literature Review
Tomohiro SetogawaTaketo KatoHiroki WatanabeShota NakamuraTetsuya MizunoToyofumi Fengshi Chen-Yoshikawa
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2024 Volume 30 Issue 1 Article ID: cr.24-00041

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Abstract

An 82-year-old male patient underwent a left upper lobectomy with anterolateral thoracotomy for lung cancer. Although a complete left-pericardial defect was observed during surgery, the pericardial repair was not performed because the left lower lobe remained and the heart was considered stable. Postoperative pathological examination revealed primary synchronous double-lung squamous-cell carcinoma (pathological stage pT2a(2)N0M0 stage IB). He was discharged without complications on postoperative day 8. Leftward displacement of the heart and left diaphragmatic elevation, suspected of phrenic-nerve paralysis, were found in the chest X-ray after discharge. However, the patient’s overall condition remained unaffected at the 5-month postoperative follow-up. To assess the need for pericardial repair, we compared cases of complete pericardial defects observed during lobectomy or pneumonectomy reported in the literature. Only one of 12 cases occurred postoperative death despite pericardial repair, and that case combined pectus excavatum and pericardial defects. Our assessment indicated that pericardial repair might not be necessary, excluding complex cases.

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© 2024 The Editorial Committee of Annals of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery

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