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Surgical Treatment in Bronchiectasis: Results of 191 Patients

Objectives: To investigate the long-term follow-up results of the patients who underwent surgery with bronchiectasis and whether there is a difference in clinical results compared to complete or incomplete resection. Materials and Methods: A total of 191 patients who underwent surgery with the diagn...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ankara Ueniversitesi Tip Fakültesi mecmuasi 2019-08, Vol.72 (2), p.241-246
Main Authors: Özkan, Murat, Sakallı, Mehmet Ali, Yenigün, Bülent Mustafa, Kocaman, Gökhan, Yüksel, Cabir, Enön, Serkan, Kayı Cangır, Ayten, Kavukçu, Şevket
Format: Article
Language:eng ; tur
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Summary:Objectives: To investigate the long-term follow-up results of the patients who underwent surgery with bronchiectasis and whether there is a difference in clinical results compared to complete or incomplete resection. Materials and Methods: A total of 191 patients who underwent surgery with the diagnosis of bronchiectasis were enrolled in Ankara University Faculty of Medicine Department of Thoracic Surgery between 1990 and 2002. The age and the gender of the patients, preoperative symptoms, localization of disease, resection indications, type of resection, complications encountered in the postoperative period, operative mortality and the association between complete/incomplete resection and postoperative symptoms were evaluated, retrospectively. Results: The indications for surgery were failure of medical therapy in 181 patients (94.8%), massive hemoptysis in five (2.6%), lung abscess in three (1.6%) and bronchiectasis due to foreign body aspiration in two (1%). In the postoperative period, 173 patients could be followed up clinically and radiologically with an average of 4.6 years (1 month to 10 years). When complete resection and incomplete resection results were compared, of the 155 patients who underwent complete resection, 135 (87.1%) were asymptomatic, 18 (11.6%) had a significant regression, and two (1.3%) had no change of preoperative symptoms, of the 18 patients who underwent incomplete resection, 14 (77.8%) had a significant regression, while 4 (22.2%) had no change of preoperative symptoms. The results of complete resection were significantly better than those of incomplete resection (p
ISSN:1307-5608
0365-8104
1307-5608
DOI:10.4274/atfm.galenos.2019.35744