Second surgery for complications of major pulmonary resection: the knack of air plombage in thoracoplasty
Review Article

Second surgery for complications of major pulmonary resection: the knack of air plombage in thoracoplasty

Mitsuhiro Kamiyoshihara1, Hitoshi Igai1, Tomohiro Yazawa2

1Department of General Thoracic Surgery, Japanese Red Cross Maebashi Hospital, Maebashi, Japan; 2Department of General Surgical Science, Gunma University Hospital, Maebashi, Japan

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: M Kamiyoshihara; (II) Administrative support: T Yazawa; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: None; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: M Kamiyoshihara; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: M Kamiyoshihara; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Dr. Mitsuhiro Kamiyoshihara. Department of General Thoracic Surgery, Japanese Red Cross Maebashi Hospital, 389-1 Asakura-Machi, Maebashi, Gunma 371-0811, Japan. Email: micha2005jp@yahoo.co.jp.

Abstract: Air plombage is a surgical procedure that reduces the pleural space. In 1953, Dr. Chamberlain designed the original “extraperiosteal plombage” to prevent complications after pulmonary segmentectomy for tuberculosis. This surgical technique was developed to prevent the formation of an intrapleural pocket of dead space, and allow collapse of the cavity and obliteration of the extrapleural space. Thus, this technique has been called as “(extraperiosteal) air plombage.” In Japan, a modified air plombage called “Kinchu method” has been performed. The indication for air plombage is as follows: (I) the remaining pulmonary parenchyma after resection does not expand and fill the residual pleural space, (II) large raw surfaces of pulmonary parenchyma remain in a plane, which cannot easily contact the chest wall, (III) there is an excessive air leak from the parenchyma. Surgical procedure is as follows: portion of the ribs above the pleural space are stripped subperiosteally, leaving attached periosteum on their outer surfaces. The size, shape, and location of the “resultant air pocket” is made to fill the defect left by lung resection. The pleura, periosteum, and intercostal muscles and facia drop into the pleural space and contact the resected surface of pulmonary parenchyma. However, care should be taken with regards to pre-, intra-, and post- operation. Particularly, to minimize atrophic and deformative changes in late phase after air plombage, it is important to avoid dissecting the costal periosteum and intercostal muscles of lower (the 8th–12th) ribs.

Keywords: Air plombage; postoperative complication; pulmonary resection; thoracoplasty


Received: 03 May 2022; Accepted: 02 August 2022; Published: 30 October 2022.

doi: 10.21037/shc-22-23


Introduction

Air plombage is a surgical procedure that reduces the pleural space (e.g., empyema cavity) (1-3). Specifically, extrapleural air plombage is performed as follows: there is empyema cavity in pleural space and lung is deflated, the space between the costal periosteum—intercostal muscles—ribs and thickened parietal pleura are dissected, the extrapleural space (“air pocket”) is then filled with various materials to collapse the underlying cavity. As pulmonary function is preserved to some extent, this surgical technique can be commonly used in patients with more limited cardiopulmonary reserve or comorbidities (4). The word “plombage” means sealing or filling; extrapleural plombage could be performed as a single localized procedure. This surgical technique was developed to prevent the formation of an intrapleural pocket of dead space, and allow collapse of the cavity and obliteration of the extrapleural space. Thus, this technique has been called as “(extraperiosteal) air plombage.”


History

In 1953, Dr. Chamberlain (5) designed the original “extraperiosteal plombage” to prevent complications after pulmonary segmentectomy for tuberculosis. This paper referred to the use of extraperiosteal plombage for subscapular collection of blood in the patient. Afterwards, in 1959, Dr. Pate (6) performed a retrospective study on air plombage. In this paper, 61 patients with concomitant air plombage were compared with 313 patients without a collapse procedure for upper lobe resections. The overall complication rate was only 1.6% in the air plombage group, but 19.3% in the no air plombage group. Additionally, only 1.6% of the air plombage group patients required further surgical treatment compared to 14% patients of the no air plombage group. Here, we showed typical diagrams on the extrapleural plombage (Figure 1).

Figure 1 The extrapleural air plombage is shown: (A) there is empyema cavity in pleural space and lung is deflated; (B) the space between the costal periosteum—intercostal muscles—ribs and thickened parietal pleura are dissected; (C) the extrapleural space (“air pocket”) is then filled with various materials to collapse the underlying cavity; (D) Pulmonary function is preserved to some extent.

In Japan, a modified air plombage called “Kinchu method” has been performed (7-9) (Figure 2); that is, “modified extraperiosteal plombage”. The “Kinchu method” is performed as follows: portions of the ribs above the pleural space are stripped subperiosteally. Then, the bloody exudate pools in the extraperiosteal space (air pocket). The compression from accumulation of bloody exudate minimizes and collapses the pleural space. Postoperatively, “air pocket” slowly fills with blood and fibrin. It decreases in size as the lung heals and pleura is pushed up by the expanding lung (6). These papers claimed that “Kinchu method” is an excellent surgical procedure, which could cure empyema with fistula, particularly, for patients in whom lung decortication could not be performed. There is no deformation of thoracic wall deformity and no decline in respiratory function in this procedure. Later, the designation of this procedure was changed from extraperiosteal “air” plombage thoracoplasty to extraperiosteal “fluid” plombage thoracoplasty (10).

Figure 2 The “Kinchu Method” is shown: (A) there is empyema cavity in pleural space and lung is deflated; (B) portions of the ribs above the pleural space are stripped subperiosteally; (C) bloody exudate (asterisk) pools in the extraperiosteal space (air pocket); (D) “air pocket” slowly fills with blood and fibrin, and (E) it decreases in size as the lung heals and pleura is pushed up by the expanding lung.

From historical perspective, it may be mentioned that conventional plombage therapy has been completely abandoned as a treatment of residual pleural spaces, and removal of the foreign materials is recommended whenever such patients are identified, if the operative risk is acceptable (11,12).


Rationale

First, it allows normal tissue to attach directly on the raw surface of the air leak at the pulmonary parenchyma or resected line of the lung. These cover multiple minute air leaks and aid in wound healing by preventing overextension which causes persistent leaks or primary disease.

Second, it gives the chest wall certain amount of flexibility. Thus, an excessive intrapleural negative pressure is reduced during forced inspiration, and it tends to minimize the passage air leak from small bronchi and pulmonary parenchyma.

Third, the procedure adjusts the shape of the intrapleural space to fit the abnormal shape of pulmonary surface resulting from resection, which can attach to all raw pleural surface, and obliterate the pleural space.


Advantages (1-3)

  • First, no deformity of rib cage and scoliosis in short term;
  • Second, less invasive, and traumatic than thoracoplasty;
  • Third, somewhat automatically reversible: dissected space back against the ribs obliterating the pleural space after lung re-expansion due to the sealing of air leak and healing of the raw surface;
  • Fourth, little paradoxical motion of the thoracic wall because of blood, fibrin, and trapped air in a closed space covered by rib cage;
  • Allows for a much larger dissecting under simplified postoperative management compared to that of a thoracoplasty.

Indication

The indication for air plombage is as follows: (I) the remaining pulmonary parenchyma after resection does not expand and fill the residual pleural space, (II) large raw surfaces of pulmonary parenchyma remain in a plane, which cannot easily contact the chest wall, (III) there is an excessive air leak from the parenchyma (3).


Tips on surgical technique and perioperative management

Portion of the ribs above the pleural space are stripped subperiosteally, leaving attached periosteum on their outer surfaces. The size, shape, and location of the “resultant air pocket” is made to fill the defect left by lung resection. The pleura, periosteum, and intercostal muscles and facia drop into the pleural space and contact the resected surface of pulmonary parenchyma. Pate et al. (6) claimed no drainage of this space was done, but we usually place the 19-Fr Blake Silastic Drain® (Ethicon; Somerville, New Jersey, USA) into the pleural space (13). The drainage is under negative pressure of 10 cmH2O and is removed on postoperative day 14 after confirming no air leak. During this situation, subcutaneous exudate fluid is pooling and the skin develop some swelling in the surgical area. After that, the exudate is absorbed and the surgical skin region become flattering over the course of about 1 month.

A necessary and sufficient air plombage is as follows (6): (I) the volume of the extrapleural pocket is approximately same as the resected pulmonary tissue. (II) The shape of the intrapleural space is approximately similar that of the remaining lung surface.

Care should be taken with regards to the following points (14,15): (I) during operation, avoid creating excessive air pocket. (II) After operation, prevent the “air pocket” infection. Additionally, the vulnerable ribs due to the loss of periosteal structures develop fractures; therefore, patients should avoid heavy physical exercise and work, and apply the bust band tightly (16). (III) Before operation, draw up the optimal range of “air pocket”, avoiding creation of an excessive extrapleural space. Moreover, in late phase after air plombage, the thoracic wall without the intercostal muscles as “supporter” commonly develops atrophic and deformative changes (14). Additionally, the stripped portion of the ribs must be intact to prevent intrapleural contamination of the space with resultant infection (6). To minimize this unfavorable sequela, it is important to avoid dissecting the costal periosteum and intercostal muscles of lower (the 8th–12th) ribs (6).


Acknowledgments

Funding: None.


Footnote

Provenance and Peer Review: This article was commissioned by the editorial office, Shanghai Chest for the series “Second Surgery”. The article has undergone external peer review.

Peer Review File: Available at https://shc.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/shc-22-23/prf

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://shc.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/shc-22-23/coif). The series “Second Surgery” was commissioned by the editorial office without any funding or sponsorship. TY served as the unpaid Guest Editor of the series and serves as an unpaid editorial board member of Shanghai Chest from January 2022 to December 2023. HI served as the unpaid Guest Editor of the series. The authors have no other conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.


References

  1. Sawamura K, Mori T, Iioka S. A new operation for chronic empyema--extra-periosteal air plombage. Kyobu Geka 1988;41:496-500. [PubMed]
  2. Kitano M, Nagasawa M, Tanaka F, et al. Changes of plombage-operations in respiratory surgery. Kyobu Geka 1992;45:1141-5. [PubMed]
  3. Iioka S, Sawamura K, Nakamura K, et al. Surgical treatment of chronic empyema--indication of our own method. Nihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1984;32:1936-42. [PubMed]
  4. Pezzella AT. History of Pulmonary Tuberculosis. Thorac Surg Clin 2019;29:1-17. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  5. Chamberlain JM, Storey CF, Klopstock R, et al. Segmental resection for pulmonary tuberculosis; 300 cases. J Thorac Surg 1953;26:471-85. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  6. Pate JW, Hughes FA Jr, Campbell RE, et al. Air plombage with resection for pulmonary tuberculosis; a technique for decreasing complications. J Thorac Surg 1959;37:435-41. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  7. Iioka S. Surgical management of chronic empyema--clinical result of one-stage operation, "Kinchu method”. Nihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1982;30:1672-83. [PubMed]
  8. Iioka S, Sawamura K, Nagaoka Y, et al. A new surgical method for chronic empyema--application of the extraperiosteal "air-plombage" procedure. Kekkaku 1977;52:627-33. [PubMed]
  9. Iioka S, Sawamura K. The surgical treatment of chronic empyema, development of a new technique of one-stage operation. Nihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1982;30:1695-704. [PubMed]
  10. Sawabata N, Iioka S, Tohjo T, et al. Left tuberculous empyema treated by “extraperiosteal fluid plombage thoracoplasty (Kinchu method)” with improvement of the respiratory function a case report. Nihon Kokyuki Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1992;6:832-6.
  11. Massard G, Thomas P, Barsotti P, et al. Long-term complications of extraperiosteal plombage. Ann Thorac Surg 1997;64:220-4; discussion 224-5. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  12. Horowitz MD, Otero M, Thurer RJ, et al. Late complications of plombage. Ann Thorac Surg 1992;53:803-6. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  13. Frankel TL, Hill PC, Stamou SC, et al. Silastic drains vs conventional chest tubes after coronary artery bypass. Chest 2003;124:108-13. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  14. Imura Y, Ohtsuka T, Yamamoto H, et al. A study on selection of operative technique for chronic empyema based on findings obtained from reoperated cases. Kekkaku 1989;64:545-9. [PubMed]
  15. Sawamura K, Mori T, Iuchi K, et al. Chronic empyema: key-point and results of our one-step operation. Nihon Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1985;86:1064-6. [PubMed]
  16. Saito M, Narita K, Tachibana M, et al. Multiple rib fractures requiring surgical treatment one year after extraperiosteal air plombage: A case report. Nihon Kokyuki Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1990;4:526-30.
doi: 10.21037/shc-22-23
Cite this article as: Kamiyoshihara M, Igai H, Yazawa T. Second surgery for complications of major pulmonary resection: the knack of air plombage in thoracoplasty. Shanghai Chest 2022;6:33.

Download Citation