Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1984; 32(1): 60-63
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1023347
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Treatment of Multiple Unilateral Arteriovenous Pulmonary Fistulae by Transection of the Pulmonary Artery

H. Toomes, K. Paul, I. Vogt-Moykopf
  • Clinic for Thoracic Medicine, Rohrbach Hospital, Heidelberg, FRG
Further Information

Publication History

1983

Publication Date:
19 March 2008 (online)

Summary

Multiple arteriovenous fistulae of the entire left pulmonary lobe were found to be the cause of increasing cyanosis on exertion and hour-glass nails in a 19-year-old patient. The right-to-left shunt amounted to 16%. The 2 possible forms of treatment were embolization of the arteriovenous fistulae or pneumonectomy. The first procedure was unsuitable because of the diffuse spread of the fistulae. In order to avoid all the early and late complications associated with a pneumonectomy, an unusual method was adopted: The left pulmonary artery was transected and the lung was left in place as a “physiological filling”. Both a subjective and objective improvement could already be seen in the immediate post-operative period. At the last follow-up examination, 16 months after the operation, this was still the case.