Methods: A total of 32 patients (16 males, 16 females; mean age 32.7±13.4 years; range 4 to 61 years) who were performed surgical resection for pulmonary sequestration between January 1987 and December 2015 were reviewed. Patients were evaluated according to demographics, symptoms, diagnostic methods, type, localization and vascular characteristics of pulmonary sequestration, type of resection, complications, and outcomes.
Results: Of the patients, intralobar sequestration was detected in 87.5% and extralobar sequestration in 12.5%. Intralobar sequestration was located in the lower lobe in 89.3% and in the upper lobe in 10.7% of the patients. All extralobar sequestrations were located in the left hemithorax; 75% was located at the base of the hemithorax and 25% was located at the apex. Of the patients, lobectomy was performed in 53.1%, wedge resection in 25%, mass excision in 12.5%, and segmentectomy in 9.4%. Postoperative complications occurred in 18.8% of the patients as prolonged air leak in three patients, wound infection in two patients, and empyema in one patient. No mortality was observed. Median follow-up period was 42 months (range 3 to 105 months) and we detected that patients remained asymptomatic.
Conclusion: Although pulmonary sequestration has a benign course, it should be removed owing to its severe complications even if patients are asymptomatic. Computed tomographic angiography is a surgeon-friendly method in the management of pulmonary sequestrations.
Table 1: Symptoms, diagnostic methods and surgical procedures
Table 2: Characteristics of patients, sequestrations and surgical procedures
Postoperative complications occurred in six patients (18.8%) as prolonged air leak (longer than 10 days) in three patients, wound infection in two patients, and empyema in one patient. The wound infections were easily managed with the appropriate antibiotics.
The empyema was treated with tube drainage and effective antibiotic was administered. No mortality was observed. Median follow-up time, which was completed in 24 patients (75%), was 42 months (range 3 to 105 months) and all patients remained asymptomatic.
Cough, voluminous sputum expectoration, recurrent episodes of pneumonia, hemoptysis and even congestive heart failure are the clinical presentations of pulmonary sequestration. Since these symptoms are not typical, pulmonary sequestration may remain disguised for years and is often misdiagnosed as bronchiectasis, pneumonia and even mass lesion. Patients may also be asymptomatic and pulmonary sequestration may be diagnosed incidentally.[5,6] In this series, 25 patients (78.1%) were symptomatic whilst 21.9% (all ELS patients and three ILS patients) was asymptomatic.
Extralobar sequestration is commonly associated with congenital malformations including congenital heart disease, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, chest wall, vertebra and other congenital pulmonary abnormalities, such as hypoplasia, congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation, congenital lobar emphysema or bronchogenic cyst.[1,2,7] The most common coexisting abnormality is congenital diaphragmatic hernia.[8] In this series, one of the ELS was associated with partial absence of the pericardium. In contrast to extralobar sequestration, intralobar sequestration is infrequently associated with other congenital abnormalities.[9]
Halkic et al.[10] s tated t hat I LS o ften r emains unrecognized until after the age of 20. The current study data support this statement with the mean age of 33.3±13.7 years (range 4 to 61 years) at diagnosis for ILS patients. Intralobar sequestration rarely causes problems in childhood.[1,11] The diagnosis was established at the age of four years in only two of the ILS patients in the current study. Intralobar sequestration has almost equal gender prevalence.[9] In the current study, distribution between the genders was equal as reported in literature.
Intralobar sequestration is contained within the normal pulmonary parenchyma without its own visceral pleura.[5] Intralobar sequestration constitutes threequarters of all pulmonary sequestrations. Typically, ILS is located in the lower lobes, and the posterior basal segment is most often involved.[1,5,10] I n t he current series, 87.5% of cases were ILS. In 25 patients (89.3%), the ILS was located in the lower lobes, and in the remaining three patients (10.7%) in the upper lobes. This rate is higher than the 2% reported by Savic et al.[1] for upper lobes.
Extralobar sequestration is usually diagnosed in infancy or childhood.[10] Extralobar sequestration may be present shortly after birth with respiratory distress or feeding difficulties. It may be diagnosed at the time of diaphragmatic hernia repair or during screening for another congenital abnormality, incidentally.[7] It has also been reported that ELS may remain asymptomatic for many years.[3] The mean age of the patients with ELS in the current study was 28.3±11.6 years (range 19 to 43 years). Even though a few reports have suggested no sex predominance for ELS, many authors have reported that ELS occurs three to four times more often in males than in females.[1,7] However, no gender predominance was recorded in the current study.
Extralobar sequestration is separated from normal pulmonary parenchyma with its own visceral pleura. Nearly one-quarter of sequestrations are ELS.[2,12] Extralobar sequestration is frequently located between the left lower lobe and the diaphragm.[5,8] In the current series, there were only four patients (12.5%) of ELS, of which three were located at the base of the hemithorax and one was at the apex.
Blood supply to the pulmonary sequestration is almost always from a systemic artery. Savic et al.[1] stated in their study of 540 patients that the blood supply of both ILS and ELS was from the thoracic aorta in 68.5%, the abdominal aorta in 21.3%, and the intercostal artery in 3.4% of cases. Halkic et al.[10] reported blood supply from the thoracic aorta in 80% and the abdominal aorta in 20% of cases. In the current series, the main blood supply to the sequestrated part arose from the thoracic aorta in 65.6%, the abdominal aorta in 28.1%, and the intercostal artery in 6.3% of patients as in the series above. The distribution for the ELS cases in detail was three from the thoracic aorta and one from the abdominal aorta.
Venous drainage is always through pulmonary veins in ILS and through a systemic vein in ELS.[2,5,13] In all the ILS patients of the current study, venous drainage was through pulmonary veins (three superior and 25 inferior pulmonary veins). Of the ELS patients, venous drainage was through the pulmonary veins in two patients, the left atrium in one patient, and the brachiocephalic vein in one patient.
A wide variety of imaging techniques have been used in the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration, including routine chest radiography, conventional tomography, radionuclide scanning, bronchography, and more recently ultrasonography, CT and magnetic resonance imaging. Traditionally, the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration has been made definitively with arterial angiography.[14] Digital subtraction angiography, CTA, and MRA are the most useful diagnostic methods, which can display the arterial and venous vascular anatomy of pulmonary sequestration.[6] Recently, CTA is an effective non-invasive method for confirming the correct diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration with high accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of 97.7%, 97.3% and 100%, respectively. It is faster and can display not only the vascular anatomy but also provide detailed information about the bronchial anatomy and the pulmonary parenchyma.[15] Chest radiography was the primary diagnostic method for all the patients in this series, and the only imaging technique in nine patients owing to the absence of CT before 1993 in our institution. In the remaining 23 patients (71.9%), thoracic CT was applied. For further confirmation, five patients underwent DSA, four underwent CTA, and two underwent MRA. Pulmonary sequestration was diagnosed with preoperative diagnostic methods in 15 patients (46.9%) and the diagnosis could be verified after histopathological examination of the resected specimen in the remaining 17 patients (53.1%). Since we have begun to consider that CTA should be carried out for cases that are difficult to diagnose, we expect that the rate of preoperative definitive diagnosis will increase with the decisive role of CTA in the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration.
The definitive treatment of pulmonary sequestration is surgical resection. Recently, therapeutic embolization has been reported as an alternative method to surgical resection especially in neonates and children.[16,17] Goto et al.[18] reported coil embolization as a safe, feasible, and effective method before surgery to prevent intraoperative bleeding from aberrant arteries. Neither therapeutic nor preventive coil embolization was performed in our clinical practice.
Resection of sequestrated parenchyma can be performed via thoracotomy or video assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). Although Wan et al.[19] first described VATS lobectomy for the surgical treatment of pulmonary sequestration in 2002, the advantages of VATS for pulmonary sequestration resection are still controversial and need further research. In a study comparing VATS and posterolateral thoracotomy for pulmonary sequestration resection, Liu et al.[13] reported no significant differences between the two groups in terms of the duration of operation, blood loss, amount of chest drainage, duration of chest drainage, length of postoperative hospital stay, and occurrence of complications. Conversely, Sun and Xiao[20] reported that patients undergoing VATS had a s tatistically s ignificantly s horter l ength o f postoperative hospital stay than patients undergoing thoracotomy, indicating that VATS might be preferable to thoracotomy for pulmonary sequestration resection. Although embolization as an interventional therapy and VATS seem more patient-friendly and less invasive, we have not yet had appropriate patients to present any findings.
Removal of sequestrated areas of the pulmonary parenchyma is the mainstay of the surgical management. Since preservation of the functioning pulmonary parenchyma is an important consideration, we performed not only segmentectomy, but also wedge resection in cases where the entire lobe was not involved. In fact, wedge resection was preferred rather than segmentectomy for this purpose (eight wedge resections and three segmentectomies).
The pathological findings include dilated bronchioles, alveolar ducts and alveoli, interstitial fibrosis and thickened vasculature with chronic inflammation surrounding dilated airspaces lined by respiratory epithelium. Concomitant acute and organizing pneumonia may be present on histological appearance.[21] Postoperative histopathological examinations confirmed the diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration and excluded any other diagnosis in all the current cases.
Even though pulmonary sequestration is benign in nature, its clinical course may be severe and lifethreatening depending on complications of congestive heart failure, hemoptysis, pneumonia, hemothorax, and malignant degeneration.[3,22,23] Hence, we support the decision of surgical removal of pulmonary sequestration even for asymptomatic patients.
In conclusion, it is crucial to consider pulmonary sequestration in the differential diagnosis of recurrent infections and hemoptysis. Currently, it may be easy to diagnose pulmonary sequestration with advanced radiological methods. Computed tomographic angiography is a surgeon-friendly method in the management of pulmonary sequestrations to evaluate the pulmonary parenchyma, display vascular and bronchial anatomy, and rule out other pathologies.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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