2015年9月至2017年7月在卢旺达三家转诊医院进行胸外科手术的描述性回顾性队列研究

I. Sibomana, M. Sinclair
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:在低收入和中等收入国家,普遍获得安全手术仍然是一项挑战。外科手术人员不足是在这些环境中进行手术的主要障碍,特别是专业手术,如心脏和胸外科手术。本文描述了在卢旺达三家转诊医院进行的胸外科手术。方法:2015年9月至2017年7月,我们在卢旺达的三家教学医院进行了一项回顾性队列研究,涉及由胸外科医生(来自卫生人力资源计划的教师)手术或在其监督下的各种胸部病变患者。这项研究只包括主要的胸部手术。数据从教师日志和患者档案中收集。收集的信息包括人口统计数据、临床表现、放射学和术中发现以及结果。获得了卢旺达大学医学和健康科学学院机构审查委员会的伦理批准。结果:32例患者在23个月的研究期间共进行了33次手术(1例患者进行了2次手术)。其中男性21例(66%),女性11例(34%)。患者年龄在13 - 77岁之间,平均年龄41岁。感染性胸部病变(主要与肺结核有关)是手术的常见适应症。16例(48%)胸腔积液需要开胸和肺去皮术或开胸术(改良Eloesser皮瓣)。其他手术包括前纵隔切开术治疗纵隔肿块(4例)、胸壁肿块活检切除(3例)、心包开窗治疗心包填塞(2例)、肺曲菌瘤切除术(2例)、肺肿瘤切除术(2例)等(4例)。死亡率为6%(2例),术后并发症3例,其中手术部位感染1例,开胸无效2例。结论:通过临床指导和专门的团队,胸外科手术可以在低资源环境中进行,在这些环境中,感染性病理占主导地位,发病率和死亡率可以接受。https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ecajs.v23i1.2本作品遵循知识共享署名4.0国际许可协议,允许在任何媒体上不受限制地使用、分发和复制,前提是您要适当注明原作者和来源(包括正式出版物的链接),提供知识共享许可协议的链接,并注明是否进行了更改。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A descriptive retrospective cohort study of thoracic surgery experiences from September 2015 to July 2017 at three referral hospitals in Rwanda
Background: Universal access to safe surgery is still a challenge in low- and middle-income countries. An insufficient surgical workforce is a major barrier for performing surgery in these settings, especially specialized operations, such as cardiac and thoracic surgeries. This article describes the thoracic surgical procedures performed at three referral hospitals in Rwanda. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study involving patients with various chest pathologies operated by or under the supervision of a thoracic surgeon (faculty from the Human Resources for Health Program), at three teaching hospitals in Rwanda, from September 2015 through July 2017. This study included only major thoracic procedures. Data were collected from the faculty logbook and patient files. The information collected included demographic data, clinical presentation, radiological and intraoperative findings, and outcomes. Ethical approval was obtained from the University of Rwanda College of Medicine and Health Sciences Institutional Review Board. Results: Thirty-two patients underwent 33 operations during the 23 months of the study (1 patient had 2 procedures). Twenty-one of the patients (66%) were male, and 11 (34%) were female. Patients’ ages ranged between 13 and 77 years, with a mean age of 41 years. Infectious chest pathologies (mostly tuberculosis-related) were common indications for surgery. Sixteen cases (48%) were thoracic empyemas that required either thoracotomy and pulmonary decortication or open thoracostomy (modified Eloesser flap). Other operations performed were anterior mediastinotomy for mediastinal mass (4 cases), biopsy and resection of chest wall mass (3 cases), pericardial window for pericardial tamponade (2 cases), resection of lung aspergilloma (2 cases), resection of a lung tumour (2 cases), and others (4 cases). Mortality was 6% (2 patients), and 3 patients had postoperative complications, which were surgical site infection in 1 patient and ineffective thoracotomy in 2 patients. Conclusions: With clinical mentorship and dedicated teams, thoracic surgery can be performed in low-resource settings, where infectious pathologies predominate, with acceptable morbidity and mortality. https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ecajs.v23i1.2   This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source (including a link to the formal publication), provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
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