Capitonnage seems better in childhood pulmonary hydatid cyst surgery

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Amine Ksia, Meriem Ben Fredj, Arije Zouaoui, Nahla Kechiche, Samia Belhassen, Sana Mosbahi, Sabrine Ben Youssef, Sami Sfar, Rachida Lamiri, Lassaad Sahnoun, Mongi Mekki, Mohsen Belghith, Abdulmohsen Bokhary, Abdellatif Nouri Published:

Author / Expert

Amine Ksia, Meriem Ben Fredj, Arije Zouaoui, Nahla Kechiche, Samia Belhassen, Sana Mosbahi, Sabrine Ben Youssef, Sami Sfar, Rachida Lamiri, Lassaad Sahnoun, Mongi Mekki, Mohsen Belghith, Abdulmohsen Bokhary, Abdellatif Nouri

Topic overview

Abstract

Background

Pulmonary hydatid disease remains an important healthcare problem. Conservative operative interventions including cystotomy or cystotomy with capitonnage are the two commonly used techniques. However, there is no scientific consensus over selection of these operative interventions.

Aim

The aim of this study is to compare these two methods: capitonnage and uncapitonnage in the surgery of childhood pulmonary hydatid cyst in regard to the postoperative period.

Methods

This is a retrospective analysis of 136 patients operated for pulmonary hydatid disease between January 2010 and July 2017 according to two techniques. Group A was cystotomy with capitonnage (n = 76), and group B was cystotomy alone (n = 60). We compared the postoperative outcomes.

Results

Our data showed pneumothorax(PNO) and emphysema were seen in 30% of Group B and only in 13.2% in Group A, and the persistence of residual cavity in 23.3% in Group B and 7.9% in Group A (p = 0.014). We have not seen any case of recurrence with capitonnage.

Conclusion

We conclude that capitonnage appears to prevent PNO and emphysema formation and a remaining residual cavity in the long term with a significant difference. And it prevents prolonged postoperative air leak and hospitalization with a slightly nonsignificant difference. It is difficult to say with absolute certainty that the noncapitonnage group is inferior to the capitonnage group, since several factors can influence the evolution.

Type of study

Clinical research article

Level of evidence III

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