A comparison of Success of autologous Blood Patching in Sealing of Bronchopleural Fistula of Primary and Secondary Spontaneous Onset.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59779/jiomnepal.550Keywords:
air leak, autologus blood patching, pneumothoraxAbstract
Introduction: Autologous Blood patching (ABP) has been used to treat Broncho pleural fistula in spontaneous pneumothorax with varying success. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of ABP when used in patients with primary (PSP) versus secondary (SSP) spontaneous pneumothorax.
Methods: All patients with spontaneous pneumothorax with no evidence of pleural infection and in whom the air leak did not subside despite 48 hours of conservative management were included. A CT scan was done to categorize if there was underlying lung disease and classify patients into primary and secondary spontaneous categories. These patients underwent blood patching in one to three episodes in 50ml aliquots. Comparisons of the demographic profile, smoking status, success rate and complications in these two groups were done.
Results: Between July 2012 and January 2014, 76 patients underwent ABP. The overall success rate of ABP was 58%. There were 29 patients who were classified as PSP and 47 with SSP. There was no difference in the sex distribution but patients with PSP were younger (P= 0.00), were more likely to present earlier (P=0.04) and had higher rates of residual pneumothorax (P= 0.05) after chest tube insertion. The success rates in the two groups were similar (P=0.76).The rate of complications was low and not different in the two types (P=0.58).
Conclusion: ABP has modest success in sealing air leak of spontaneous onset. We found the success and complication rates in the two types of spontaneous pneumothoracesto be equivalent
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Journal of Institute of Medicine Nepal

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.