Jean-François Velly
University of Bordeaux
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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1992
Samer A.M. Nashef; Claire Dromer; Jean-François Velly; Louis Labrousse; Louis Couraud
Prosthetic tracheobronchial stents provide palliative treatment for narrowed airways where surgical resection is inadvisable. Over a 1-year period, 28 Gianturco expanding wire stents were used in 15 patients for nonneoplastic indications: pure fibrous airway stenosis (6), fibroinflammatory stenosis (4), and tracheobronchial malacia (5). Insertion was technically straightforward. A satisfactory airway lumen with immediate improvement in ventilatory function was obtained in all patients. After insertion all patients had an irritation-type cough that either subsided spontaneously (10 patients) or was successfully suppressed with inhaled corticosteroid therapy (5 patients). The most common complication (12 patients) was granuloma formation leading to stent removal in 3 patients with fibroinflammatory stenosis. Other complications were dysphagia (1), suction catheter entrapment (1), and fatal massive hemoptysis (1). At a mean follow-up of 13 months (range, 3 to 19 months) all remaining stents are functioning well with no displacement or infection. Overall results were satisfactory in pure fibrous stenoses and tracheobronchial malacia but poor in the presence of inflammation. Tracheobronchial wire stents can be successfully used in selected patients.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000
Jacques Jougon; Michel Ballester; Emmanuel Choukroun; Jean Dubrez; Gilles Reboul; Jean-François Velly
BACKGROUND Postintubation tracheobronchial rupture is usually responsible for unstable intraoperative or postoperative conditions, and its management is discussed. We insist on conservative treatment as a viable alternative after late diagnosis of postintubation tracheobronchial rupture. METHODS We conducted a retrospective study including 14 consecutive patients treated between April 1981 and July 1998. RESULTS Twelve tracheobronchial ruptures occurred after intubation for general surgery and two after thoracic surgery. In all cases, the tear consisted of a linear laceration of the posterior membranous wall of the tracheobronchial tree ranging from 2 to 6 cm. One death occurred in a very weak patient unfit to undergo a redo operation for surgical repair. Seven patients were treated conservatively and cured without sequelae. Six patients underwent surgical repair, of whom 2 were diagnosed and repaired intraoperatively. CONCLUSIONS Aggressive surgical repair is not always mandatory after delayed diagnosis of iatrogenic tracheobronchial rupture. Conservative treatment must often be considered, except after lung resection.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2003
Jacques Jougon; Michel Ballester; Frédéric Delcambre; Tarun Mac Bride; Claire Dromer; Jean-François Velly
BACKGROUND The aim of this study is to report a series of spontaneous pneumomediastinum in a population of young, tall, and thin patients with a history of thoracic hyper pressure, and to analyze the assessment required in such patients. METHODS A retrospective study of an unicentric series and a review of the literature from 1980 to 2002 were performed. RESULTS Between December 1996 and January 2002, 12 patients (mean age, 25 years old; mean height, 172 cm; and mean weight, 63 kg) were admitted with spontaneous pneumomediastinum. In all patients, high intrathoracic pressure by cough or acute effort was the precipitating factor. Most frequent complaints were acute chest pain, asthenia, and subcutaneous emphysema. The following assessment was performed: chest roentgenogram in 12 of 12 patients (12/12); computer tomography (CT) scan in 8/12; bronchoscopy in 7/12; esophagoscopy in 6/12; esophagography in 2/12. Outcome was always uneventful without any recurrence. Hospital stay ranged from 0 to 6 days. The Medline research revealed that articles consist mainly of case reports. Two articles only report a multicentric series of 25 and 36 cases, respectively. No organ perforation was found either in our series or in our review of the literature. CONCLUSIONS Spontaneous pneumomediastinum follows alveolar rupture in the pulmonary interstitium. The dissection of gas towards the hilum and mediastinum is produced by an episode of acute high intrathoracic pressure. It affects mostly young people, and this is the case in our series. Endoscopic thoracic assessment may be risky and is not always necessary. Chest CT or esophageal contrast study should be performed in case of diagnostic doubt of esophageal perforation.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995
Louis Couraud; Jacques Jougon; Jean-François Velly
BACKGROUND After 1970, the widespread use of nasotracheal intubation, avoiding tracheostomy and its pitfalls, resulted in more frequent laryngeal or laryngotracheal stenoses, which required more complex and sometimes multistaged procedures. METHODS A series of 217 nontumoral stenoses of the upper airway were treated following the same therapeutic principles in the period 1978 to 1992. Two hundred one of them were iatrogenic postintubation strictures (92%); the others were posttraumatic (7), idiopathic (5), and various (4). RESULTS One hundred twenty (55%) were tracheal stenoses and treated by resection and primary end-to-end anastomosis with 117 excellent or good results and three deaths. Length of the stenosis, old age, neuropsychological sequelae, and overall poor respiratory status of the patients made up the remaining difficulties in the treatment. Ninety-seven (45%) were laryngotracheal stenoses with much more complex surgical indications: 57 patients underwent tracheal and subglottic resection and anastomosis with 56 successes and one death, 7 had laryngotracheal resection and anastomosis with total cricoidectomy and consequently laryngeal stenting for 3 to 6 months (six successes, one death), 3 had supraglottic resection and anastomosis (three successes), 12 patients with glottic opening difficulties and short laryngeal stenosis underwent a laryngeal enlargement over a T tube without resection (11 successes, one death), and 18 were subjected to a complex combination of resection and modeling with 16 successes, 2 failures, and 1 death. Final results were successful in 208 cases (96%) with seven deaths and two failures. Mild phonetic sequelae were observed after laryngeal modeling. A minimal follow-up of 1 year has shown long-term stability of most repairs. CONCLUSIONS Despite acceptable results, the therapeutic approach remains difficult for laryngotracheal stenoses involving the glottic and the supraglottic level as well as for those that have not responded to previous attempts at repair. In a few cases, despite a meticulous preoperative assessment, the surgical strategy can only be adopted intraoperatively. The key to surgical success is undoubtedly a careful preoperative treatment of infection and inflammation as well as a meticulous muco-mucosal approximation of healthy margins at the anastomosis.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1992
Louis Couraud; Eugène Baudet; Christian Martigne; Xavier Roques; Jean-François Velly; Nadine Laborde; Jean Dubrez; Frédéric Clerc; Claire Dromer; Eric Vallières
Donor airway ischemia is the main cause for defective tracheal or bronchial healing after double-lung transplantation. Anatomical studies and bronchial arteriograms have shown that the right intercostal bronchial artery is constant (95% of instances) and provides an important blood supply to the distal trachea, the carina, and the right bronchial tree as well as to the left side through a subcarinal and periadventitial anastomostic network. To maintain this important bilateral bronchial circulation, it is of capital importance not to mobilize the arteries individually and to avoid large dissections around the carina. Both bronchi can thus be revascularized by indirect aortic reimplantation using a bypass graft to a single aortic patch that includes the origin of the right intercostal bronchial artery. Furthermore, the origin of other vessels (a common trunk and left arteries) can be found within a short distance of the right intercostal bronchial artery and possibly be contained within the same aortic patch. From a series of 56 lung transplantations, 8 patients underwent restoration of the bronchial vascularization using a recipient saphenous vein graft between the donor bronchial arteries and the anterior aspect of the recipients ascending aorta. A lower tracheal anastomosis was performed. Bronchial arterial blood supply was evaluated both by endoscopy and by arteriography at about the 15th postoperative day. The bronchial circulation was visualized at this time in five of seven arteriographies, and this was associated with excellent tracheal healing in all 8 patients.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997
Jacques Jougon; Michel Ballester; John P. Duffy; Jean Dubrez; Christophe Delaisement; Jean-François Velly; Louis Couraud
BACKGROUND Advanced age increases the risk of any major surgical intervention, particularly esophageal resection. High morbidity and increased mortality have been reported in operations for esophageal cancer in the elderly. METHODS To determine outcome, risk factors, and the advisability of esophageal resection in the elderly, a single-institution retrospective review was performed of esophagectomy for cancer over a 14-year period. From January 1, 1980, to December 31, 1993, 540 patients underwent esophageal resection for esophageal cancer. These patients were divided into two groups: group 1, n = 89, patients 70 years of age or older; and group 2, n = 451, patients younger than 70 years of age. The two groups were compared according to preoperative risk factors, morbidity rate, mortality rate, mean stay in the hospital after operation, and long-term survival. RESULTS Adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction was the most common tumor in group 1 and was usually managed with a single incisional approach. There were no significant differences between the groups concerning morbidity (24.7% in group 1), mortality (7.8% in group 1), mean stay in the hospital (23.3 days in group 1), or long-term survival (59%, 23%, and 13% at 1, 3, and 5 years, respectively, in group 1). CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that esophagectomy can be performed in selected elderly patients without increasing morbidity or mortality and with long-term survival.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2002
Hugues Begueret; Béatrice Vergier; Marie Parrens; Philippe Lehours; François Laurent; Jean-Marc Vernejoux; Pierre Dubus; Jean-François Velly; Francis Mégraud; André Taytard; Jean-Philippe Merlio; Antoine de Mascarel
Primary lung non-Hodgkins lymphoma is a rare neoplasm mostly represented by low-grade B-cell lymphomas of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. Their diagnostic criteria are now well defined on surgical specimens, but pathologists may experience difficulties in distinguishing them on exiguous biopsies from benign lymphoid hyperplasia and other lymphomas. Therefore, we examined a series of 26 lung lymphoid lesions to further define the pathologic features of either lymphoma or lymphoid hyperplasia on small specimens. We observed 16 primary lung non-Hodgkins lymphomas with a large predominance of low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue-type lymphomas (87.5%, n = 14). There were no autoimmune disorders, but three patients had a concomitant infectious disease (hepatitis C virus and Helicobacter pylori gastritis). One patient presented with a synchronous pulmonary adenocarcinoma. As well as the classical mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue cellular infiltrate, immunohistochemical characterization of the 14 mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue-type lymphomas revealed the CD20+/CD43+ centrocyte-like cell phenotype in 10 cases (71.5%). Although the lymphoepithelial lesions observed in all lymphomatous cases have been reported in lung lymphoid hyperplasia, the determination of B-cell CD20+/CD43+ phenotype of the intraepithelial lymphocytes highly increased the specificity of lymphoepithelial lesions. A monoclonal immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement was present in 71.4% of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue-type lymphoma specimens. Investigation of H. pylori by polymerase chain reaction detection was negative, even for the two cases associated with H. pylori gastritis.
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2001
Jacques Jougon; O. Cantini; Frédéric Delcambre; Antonio Minniti; Jean-François Velly
OBJECTIVE To raise awareness of this complication of tracheal intubation, to emphasize the gravity due to delayed diagnosis, and to advocate a surgical treatment. METHODS Between April 1980 and January 2000, 97 patients were treated for esophageal perforation in our department. We reviewed the cases of perforation occurring after attempted tracheal intubation. Each case is presented. Discussion is focused on diagnosis and treatment. RESULTS Esophageal perforation occurred after attempted endotracheal intubation in five cases among 58 iatrogenic perforations. There were four women and one man (mean age 72 years). In all cases, it was for a planned operation. Intubation was performed by a single lumen tube in three cases and a double lumen tube in two cases. Presenting symptoms were acute in one case and insidious in four cases. Free interval before diagnosis and treatment was long in all but one case, with an average of 179 h (range 5--432). Two patients suffered from septic shock when they were transferred. All patients were operated on. Two patients died. CONCLUSION Post intubation esophageal perforation is one of the most life threatening esophageal perforation. Delayed diagnosis is the first cause of gravity. Prevention of this complication begins with recognition of a potentially difficult intubation. Good outcome follows from rapid diagnosis and early surgical treatment.
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1991
Jean-François Velly; Martigne C; Moreau Jm; Jean Dubrez; Kerdi S; Louis Couraud
This report concerns 47 ruptures of the tracheo-bronchial tree from the tracheal origin to the division of the lobar bronchi (trachea in 30 patients, main bronchus in 11, intermediate or lobar bronchus in 6). The disruption was circumferential in 24 cases and non-circumferential in 23. Injuries resulted from crush or blunt trauma in 35 cases, from seat belt or rope strangulation in 8 cases and in 4 cases, lesions were discovered following the tracheal intubation. The main symptoms were cervico-mediastinal emphysema (39), pneumothorax (31), acute dyspnea (28) and hemoptysis (11). The diagnosis was always confirmed endoscopically. In 8 patients, management of the lesions was delayed for more than 1 week due to misdiagnosis or severe associated injuries. Thirty-eight patients underwent tracheal or bronchial surgical repair associated in 13 cases with a temporary stenting, 4 patients underwent partial or total lung resection, 2 were managed by laser therapy and the 5 others received only medical care and endoscopic survey. Four patients died (8.5%), 2 from bleeding in the bronchial tree from a pulmonary artery tear, 1 from hypertensive pneumothorax under respiratory support and the last from mediastinitis due to delayed diagnosis of an associated oesophageal wound. All 43 other survived in spite of some very critical situations. This experience confirms that technical problems of surgical repair are nowadays overcome and that prognosis of tracheobronchial ruptures mainly depends on the initial control of respiratory failure and complications. Avoiding lethal anoxia or endobronchial damage in the emergency period before referring the patient to the surgeon is essential.
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996
Eugène Baudet; Claire Dromer; Jean Dubrez; Jacques Jougon; Xavier Roques; Jean-François Velly; Claude Deville; Louis Couraud
OBJECTIVE Between May 1990 and January 1994, 18 patients underwent en bloc double-lung transplantation with tracheal anastomosis and bronchial arterial revascularization. Because at that time it was already suggested that chronic ischemia could be a contributing factor in occurrence of obliterative bronchiolitis, the purpose of this study was to evaluate, with a follow-up ranging from 22 to 69 months, the midterm effects of bronchial arterial revascularization on development of obliterative bronchiolitis. RESULTS Results were assessed according to tracheal healing, functional results, rejection, infection, and incidence of obliterative bronchiolitis. There were no intraoperative deaths or reexplorations for bleeding related to bronchial arterial revascularization, but there were three hospital deaths and five late deaths, two of them related to obliterative bronchiolitis. According to the criteria previously defined, tracheal healing was assessed as grade I, IIa, or IIb in 17 patients and grade IIIa in only one patient. Early angiography (postoperative days 20 to 40) demonstrated a patent graft in 11 of the 14 patients in whom follow-up information was obtained. Ten patients are currently alive with a 43-month mean follow-up. Among the 15 patients surviving more than 1 year, functional results have been excellent except in five in whom obliterative bronchiolitis has developed and who had an early or late graft thrombosis. Furthermore, those patients had a significantly higher incidence of late acute rejection (p < 0.02), cytomegalovirus disease (p < 0.006), and bronchitis episodes (p < 0.0008) than patients free from obliterative bronchiolitis. CONCLUSION We conclude that besides its immediate beneficial effect on tracheal healing, long-lasting revascularization was, at least in this small series, associated with an absence of obliterative bronchiolitis, thus suggesting but not yet proving the possible role of chronic ischemia in this multifactorial disease.