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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 89, 1-7, Copyright © 1985 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
JC Baldwin, SW Jamieson, PE Oyer, EB Stinson, ME Billingham, NE Shumway and JB Mark
Eighteen combined heart and lung transplant operations were performed
between March, 1981, and March, 1984. Six of these patients have undergone
bronchoscopy, at varying intervals after transplantation. Five of these
procedures were done for specific clinical indications; one was done
incidentally, during another surgical procedure requiring general
anesthesia. All patients had intact, healing tracheal anastomotic suture
lines; there were no instances of tracheal stenosis. The distal
tracheobronchial tree appeared endoscopically normal in the transplanted
lungs, except in areas of known infiltrates. Four of the patients had
endobronchial biopsies, and alveolar eosinophilic proteinaceous exudate and
submucosal mononuclear infiltrate were consistent features. Two of the
later biopsies suggest that squamous metaplasia of the respiratory
epithelium may occur with long-term follow-up. Controversy exists as to the
optimal technique for tracheal anastomosis, but in the case of the
steroid-treated, immunosuppressed transplant patient, continuous
anastomosis with polypropylene has yielded satisfactory results.
ARTICLES
Bronchoscopy after cardiopulmonary transplantation
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J. C. Baldwin Invited letter concerning: Double lung transplantation in situs inversus with Kartagener's syndrome J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg., November 1, 1994; 108(5): 992 - 993. [Full Text] |
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