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find Keyword "thymectomy" 23 results
  • Clinical application of subxiphoid uni-portal thoracoscopic thymectomy: A propensity score matching study

    ObjectiveTo investigate the safety, feasibility and advantages of subxiphoid uni-portal thoracoscopic thymectomy.MethodsClinical data of 65 patients undergoing subxiphoid uni-portal thoracoscopic thymectomy in our hospital from September 2018 to March 2019 were retrospectively analyzed. They were treated as a subxiphoid surgery group, including 36 males and 29 females, aged 49.5 (29-71) years. The incision with the length of about 3 cm was located approximately 1 cm under the xiphoid process. From January 2016 to December 2017, 65 patients received intercostal uni-portal thoracoscopic thymectomy, who were treated as a control group, including 38 males and 27 females, aged 48.9 (33-67) years. All patients who were clinically diagnosed with thymic tumor before surgery were treated with total thymectomy. After surgery, expectoration and analgesia were used.ResultsThere was no statistically significant difference in general clinical data, lesion size, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative catheterization time, postoperative hospital stay and postoperative pathology between the two groups. All operations were successfully completed, and the patients in both groups recovered uneventfully after surgery. Visual analogue scale scores on the 1st, 3rd, 7th and 30th day after surgery in the subxiphoid surgery group were lower than those in the control group.ConclusionThe subxiphoid uni-portal thoracoscopic approach can achieve total thymectomy with less trauma and faster postoperative recovery.

    Release date:2020-03-25 09:52 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Comparison of extended thymectomy and medicine for myasthenia gravis

    Objective To assess the long-term results and relevant influencing factors of extended thymectomy and medicine-alone treatment of non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis (MG) patients. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 174 patients with non-thymomatous MG diagnosed and treated in our department from December 2009 to April 2017, including 81 males and 93 females, aged 13-88 (47.1±17.8) years. According to the different treatment methods, the patients were divided into two groups: an operation group (91 patients receiving extended thymectomy) and a medicine-alone group (83 patients receiving medical therapy alone). The efficacy was evaluated according to the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America (MGFA). Survival curves of the patients were plotted using the Kaplan-Meier method to evaluate the remission rate and survival rate. Cox regression analysis was used to assess the influencing factors of the outcomes. Results The patients were followed up for 3 to 94 (39.1±26.9) months. As a result, 29 patients (31.9%) achieved complete remission in the surgery group and 13 patients (15.7%) were completely relieved in the medicine-alone group (P=0.014). Further analysis showed that treatment pattern (P=0.018) and MG type (P=0.021) were the main factors related to the efficacy. Conclusion For patients with non-thymomatous MG, extended thymectomy is superior to the medicine-alone in terms of complete remission rate and the postoperative immunosuppression ratio.

    Release date:2018-08-28 02:21 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Clinical efficacy and learning curve of robot-assisted thymectomy via subxiphoid approach

    Objective To explore the clinical efficacy and learning curve of robot-assisted thymectomy via subxiphoid approach. MethodsThe clinical data of patients with robot-assisted thymectomy surgery via subxiphoid approach performed by the same surgical team in the Department of Thoracic Surgery of Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital from February 2021 to August 2022 were retrospectively analyzed. The cumulative sum (CUSUM) analysis and best fit curve were used to analyze the learning curve of this surgery. The general information and perioperative indicators of patients at different learning stages were compared to explore the impact of different learning stages on clinical efficacy of patients. ResultsA total of 67 patients were enrolled, including 31 males and 36 females, aged 57.10 (54.60, 59.60) years. The operation time was 117.00 (87.00, 150.00) min. The best fitting equation of CUSUM learning curve was y=0.021 2x3–3.192 5x2 +120.17x–84.444 (x was the number of surgical cases), which had a high R2 value of 0.977 8, and the fitting curve reached the top at the 25th case. Based on this, the learning curve was divided into a learning period and a proficiency period. The operation time and intraoperative blood loss in the proficiency stage were significantly shorter or less than those in the learning stage (P<0.001), and there was no statistical difference in thoracic drainage time and volume between the two stages (P>0.05). ConclusionThe learning process of robot-assisted thymectomy via subxiphoid approach is safe, and this technique can be skillfully mastered after 25 cases.

    Release date:2023-06-13 11:24 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Analysis of risk factors of myasthenia crisis after thymectomy in patients with myasthenia gravis

    ObjectiveTo analyze the risk factors of myasthenia gravis crisis after thymectomy with myasthenia gravis (MG).MethodsSixty-five myasthenia gravis patients who had myasthenia crisis after thymectomy in Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University from June 2006 to June 2019 were retrospectively enrolled, including 31 males and 34 females, aged 15-78 (45.7±17.8) years. The relationship between myasthenia crisis after thymectomy and surgical option, operation time, pathological type, et al. were anylyzed.ResultsOperation time and pathological type were the predictive factors of postoperative myasthenic crisis. The area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of MG type (Osserman) was 0.676, the cut-off value wasⅡB type, the sensitivity was 37.5%, the specificity was 90.5%, and the Youden’s index was 0.280. The AUC of thymoma stage (Masaoka) was 0.682, cut-off value was stageⅡ, sensitivity was 62.5%, specificity was 66.7%, and Youden’s index was 0.292. The AUC of blood loss was 0.658, the cut-off value was 90 mL, the sensitivity was 87.5%, the specificity was 69.6%, and the Youden’s index was 0.304.ConclusionPreoperative MG classification, pathological type, operation time and blood loss are the risk factors of postoperative myasthenic crisis. Therefore, adequate preoperative preparation, rapid and careful intraoperative operation and active postoperative management can reduce the occurrence of postoperative myasthenic crisis.

    Release date:2020-02-26 04:33 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Comparison of different types of thymectomy for the treatment of thymoma with myasthenia gravis

    Objective To compare the different surgical treatment methods of thymoma combined with myasthenia gravis (MG), and to discuss the clinical effectiveness of thoracoscopic combined mediastinoscopic extended thymectomy. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 58 patients of thymoma combined with myasthenia gravis in Northern Jiangsu People's Hospital between 2011 and 2016 year. According to the operation method, the patients were divided into three groups including a group A for thoracoscopic thymectomy (n=32), a group B for thoracoscopic combined mediastinoscopic thymectomy (n=15), and a group C for transsternal thymectomy (n=11). The clinical effects were observed and compared. Results In the group A and the group B, the bleeding volume, postoperative hospital stay and other complications were significantly lower than those in the group C with statistical differences (P<0.05). The incidence of myasthenic crisis in the group B (6.7%) was less than that in the group C (36.4 %), but the difference was not statistically different (P=0.058). The operation time of the three groups was 122.0 ± 39.4 min, 130.3 ± 42.5 min, and 142.3 ± 40.8 min respectively with no statistical difference between the two groups (P>0.05). The rate of dissection grade in the group B (grade 1, 12 patients, 80%) was significantly greater than that in the group A (grade 1, 14 patients, 43.8%,P<0.05). The effective rate of the group A, the group B, the group C was 84.4%, 93.3% and 90.9%, respectively with no statistical difference between groups (P>0.05). Conclusion The thoracoscopy combined mediastinoscopic thymectomy not only has the advantages of less trauma, quicker recovery and fewer complications, but also can more thoroughly clean the thymus and adipose tissue, which can achieve the same therapeutic effect as the transsternal thymectomy.

    Release date:2018-08-28 02:21 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Fatal outcome after thymectomy in a myasthenia gravis patient following symptom improvement with perioperative efgartigimod: A case report

    [Abstract]This study reports a case of an 83-year-old female patient with systemic severe myasthenia gravis (American Myasthenia Foundation class Ⅳb) and multiple comorbidities who achieved minimal clinical status through preoperative alemtuzumab treatment (10 mg/kg, once per week for 4 consecutive weeks). After undergoing robotic thymectomy, the patient remained clinically stable in the early postoperative period until the 5th day after surgery when she developed dysphagia. Despite intravenous immunoglobulin and other therapeutic interventions, the patient’s myasthenic symptoms continued to worsen, coughing was impaired, respiratory insufficiency intensified, non-invasive ventilation support was required, and pulmonary infection occurred. Clinical symptoms further deteriorated, with diarrhea, urinary tract infection, and progressive respiratory tract infection. She was subsequently transferred to the intensive care unit for invasive mechanical ventilation and therapeutic plasmapheresis. These interventions failed to halt the disease progression, which eventually led to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, and the patient died. Notably, among the other 12 patients receiving alemtuzumab treatment during the same period, none experienced such severe complications. This case is exceptional, and a direct causal relationship between alemtuzumab and mortality risk cannot be established at this time. Further research is needed to clarify perioperative immune management strategies.

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  • The 100 most cited studies on surgical treatment of myasthenia gravis: A bibliometric analysis

    ObjectiveTo analyze the research hotspots and progress of surgical treatment of myasthenia gravis. MethodsThe top 100 most cited articles on surgical treatment of myasthenia gravis were identified by searching the Web of Science database, and a bibliometric analysis was conducted. ResultsThe publication year of the top 100 most cited articles ranged from 1939 to 2021, and the number of citations ranged from 55 to 850 per article. Most of the included articles were original research articles (75/100), which were mainly retrospective studies (64/75). The United States was the country with the most published articles and most citations, and Annals of Thoracic Surgery was the most sourced journal (n=20). Through VOSviewer analysis, high-density keywords were thymectomy, maximal thymectomy, extended thymectomy, transcervical thymectomy, thymoma, and autoantibodies. ConclusionThe scope of surgical resection, surgical approach and pathogenesis are the current hotspots in the field of surgical treatment of myasthenia gravis. It is hoped that this paper can provide references for future researches in this field.

    Release date:2023-06-13 11:24 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Technical points of modular operation and standard procedure for three-port anterior mediastinal thymic disease surgery via subxiphoid approach: Experience of Tangdu Hospital

    Surgery is an important treatment for the anterior mediastinal disease. With the rapid development of minimally invasive techniques, complete resection of the lesion in most patients with thymic disease can be achieved through thoracoscopic surgery. Practice has proved that the three-port resection of anterior mediastinal thymus disease via the subxiphoid approach is an ideal surgical method for the treatment of anterior mediastinal thymic tumors at present, which has strong popularization and popularity and can benefit the patients. The procedure focuses primarily on the anterior and upper mediastinum and can thoroughly expose the anatomy of the mediastinum and both sides, with minimal intraoperative bleeding, high safety, minimal trauma and postoperative pain, and a short hospital stay. It has clear advantages over conventional thoracic open-heart surgery and transversal resection. However, the surgical approach and field of view, and intraoperative precautions of this procedure are completely different from those of previous thoracoscopic procedures, and from the subxiphoid single-port approach adopted by other centers. Based on 10 years of surgical experience at our center, a modular mode of surgical operation has been developed and its procedure has been standardized. This paper will share and discuss relevant operational points and experiences.

    Release date:2024-11-27 02:51 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Extended thymectomy for myasthenia gravis via subxiphoid versus intercostal approaches: A retrospective cohort study in a single center

    ObjectiveTo analyze the clinical outcomes of extended thymectomy for myasthenia gravis (MG) patients under different surgical approaches, and to determine the factors affecting the prognosis of MG. MethodsThe MG patients who underwent extended thymectomy from January 2014 to March 2021 in our hospital were retrospectively collected. According to the surgical approach, they were divided into a subxiphoid group and an intercostal group, and the perioperative results and prognosis were compared between the two groups. A “good outcome” was defined as complete stable remission (CSR), pharmacological remission (PR) or minimal manifestations state (MMS); a “poor outcome” was defined as outcomes worse than MMS. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the factors associated with the good outcomes. ResultsA total of 187 MG patients were included in the study, including 82 males and 105 females, with a median age of 50 (36, 60) years. There were 134 patients in the intercostal group and 53 patients in the subxiphoid group. Compared with the intercostal group, although the operation time of the subxiphoid group was longer [200.0 (172.0, 232.0) min vs. 141.0 (118.0, 169.0) min, P<0.001], the intraoperative blood loss was less [10.0 (10.0, 20.0) mL vs. 20.0 (10.0, 50.0) mL, P<0.001], the postoperative hospital stay was shorter [3.0 (2.5, 4.0) d vs. 5.0 (3.0, 7.0) d, P<0.001], and the incidence of complications was lower [1 (1.9%) vs. 26 (19.4%), P=0.001]. A total of 159 (85.0%) patients were followed up for a median period of 46 (13, 99) months, with a good outcome rate of 90.6% and CSR rate of 33.3%. There were no statistical differences in PR, MMS or overall good outcome rates between the two groups (P>0.05). Multivariate logistic analysis showed that age≤50 years was an independent predictor for "good outcome" of MG patients. ConclusionExtended thymectomy via subxiphoid for MG is a safe, feasible and effective surgical approach.

    Release date:2024-08-02 10:43 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Uniportal versus three-port subxiphoid video-assisted thoracoscopic extended thymectomy: A retrospective cohort study

    ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical characteristics of uniportal and three-port subxiphoid video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (XVATS) extended thymectomy.MethodsThe clinical data of 60 consecutive patients of XVATS thymectomy in Xuzhou Central Hospital from January 2017 to May 2019 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 29 males and 31 females, with an average age of 53.1 (27.0-76.0) years. The patients were divided into an uniportal XVATS group (30 patients) and a three-port XVATS group (30 patients). The clinical effectiveness was compared between the two groups.ResultsThere was no significant difference in age, sex, body mass index, tumor size, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative time of thoracic tube indwelling and thoracic drainage, or postoperative hospitalization time between the two groups (P>0.05). There was no perioperative mortality, conversion to thoracotomy, thrombosis or mediastinal infection. The operation time of the uniportal XVATS group was significantly longer than that of the three-port group (87.5±19.0 min vs. 75.8±15.7 min, P=0.012). Besides, patients in the uniportal group had significantly lower pain score during 3-14 postoperative days than that of the three-port group (P=0.001).ConclusionUniportal XVATS extended thymectomy is feasible with less pain as compared with the patients using three-port XVATS, but it needs longer operation time at initial stage.

    Release date:2020-05-28 10:21 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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