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Tubeless Surgery With Impaired Pulmonary Function
Sponsor: The Second Hospital of Shandong University
Summary
Some patients with impaired lung function require minimally invasive surgical treatment, including those with lung cancer, benign lung tumors, pneumothorax, or lung volume reduction surgery. Patients with borderline lung function often cannot be extubated immediately postoperatively under conventional treatment models. These patients typically need to be transferred to the surgical ICU for close monitoring. However, positive-pressure mechanical ventilation with an endotracheal tube carries risks of further airway injury and persistent air leakage from the lung surface, leading to a high incidence of postoperative respiratory failure. Non-intubated minimally invasive surgery (tubeless), which preserves spontaneous breathing without endotracheal intubation, avoids the physical stimulation of intubation and the airway damage caused by mechanical ventilation. This approach may reduce the incidence of postoperative airway injury and respiratory failure, potentially expanding the indications for minimally invasive lung surgery, lowering postoperative complication and mortality rates. The aim is to further clarify the surgical indications for non-intubated single-port minimally invasive surgery in patients with impaired lung function, the decision-making criteria for postoperative ICU transfer, and the safety and feasibility of this comprehensive management approach.
Official title: Non-intubated Thoracoscopic Surgery for Lung Leision in Patients With Impaired Pulmonary Function
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
14 Years - 85 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2021-04-10
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2025-02-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Non-intubated thoracoscopic surgery
Non-intubated thoracoscopic lung surgery for patients with impaired pulmonary function
Locations (1)
The Second Hospital of Shandong University
Jinan, Shandong, China