Journal of pediatric surgery | 2019

Analysis of the etiology and treatment of chylothorax in 119 pediatric patients in a single clinical center.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nTo summarize the etiology and treatment of 119 patients with chylothorax in our hospital.\n\n\nMETHODS\nA total of 119 patients with chylothorax, divided into a neonate group, an infant group, and an older-than-1-year group, were included in our study and analyzed from January 2000 to July 2017 in the Children s Hospital of Chongqing Medical University.\n\n\nRESULTS\nA total of 90 males and 29 females were included in our study. In the neonate group, 21 chylothorax cases were due to idiopathic factors, constituting 72.4% of the cases; 8 were related to cardiothoracic surgery, constituting 27.6%. In the infant group, 15 chylothorax cases were due to cardiothoracic surgery, constituting 55.6% of the cases; 11 were related to idiopathic factors, constituting 40.7%; and 1 was related to lymphoma, constituting 3.8%. In the older-than-1-year group, 33 chylothorax cases were due to idiopathic factors, constituting 52.4% of the cases; 25 were cardiothoracic surgery, constituting 39.7%; 2 were related to another internal medicine disease, constituting 3.2%; 2 were due to injury, constituting 3.2%; and 1 was related to lymphoma, constituting 1.6%. All the patients sequentially underwent thoracic drainage therapy, followed by fasting, thoracic injection of an adhesion-promoting agent, and thoracic duct ligation surgery. Among the neonates, 23 patients (79%) with fasting therapy improved, and 5 patients with fasting + intrapleural injection improved (17%). In the infant group, fasting promoted recovery in 14 patients, accounting for 51%, and fasting + thoracic injection improved the conditions of 10 patients, accounting for 37%. In the older-than-1-year group, fasting was effective in 35 patients, accounting for 55%; fasting + thoracic injection was effective in 22 patients, accounting for 34%; and fasting + thoracic injection + thoracic duct ligation surgery enabled the recovery of 2 patients, accounting for 3.2%.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nIn our center, the main causes of chylothorax in the neonates group are idiopathic factors but may also include a history of unspecified birth trauma; the proportions of idiopathic factors in the infant and older-than-1-year groups are also higher, but the iatrogenic factors are significantly increased in the latter 2 groups. All the patients underwent thoracic drainage therapy, and fasting promoted the recovery of most children. When fasting was ineffective, subsequent thoracic injections were effective. If the above two methods failed, surgery was a method of choice, but it was not always effective.\n\n\nLEVEL OF EVIDENCE\nLevel IV.\n\n\nTYPE OF STUDY\nRetrospective study.

Volume 54 7
Pages \n 1293-1297\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2018.05.008
Language English
Journal Journal of pediatric surgery

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