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Chapter 6


                 Thoracoscopy




                 Romain Pizzi












                 Introduction


                                  Many surgeons who work on humans prefer to refer to video-assisted
                                  thoracic  surgery  (or  VATS)  instead  of  using  the  term  thoracoscopic
                                  surgery. This highlights one of the main benefits that endosurgery brings
                                  to  thoracic  surgery:  visualisation.  The  use  of  the  term  also  recognises
                                  that  some  procedures  cannot  be  completed  solely  via  thoracoscopy.
                                  Enhanced  visualisation  can  however  help  reduce  wounds  to  a  mini-
                                  thoracotomy,  without  the  need  for  rib  retraction  and  the  subsequent
                                  associated postoperative pain. Even if still performing an intra-thoracic
                                  procedure in a standard open technique, use of an endoscope can help
                                  improve this with excellent illumination and magnified visualisation. The
                                  ultimate  aim  of  thoracoscopy  should  be  safe,  visual  surgery,  with  the
                                  secondary benefit of smaller wounds and resultant lower postoperative
                                  morbidity. Small open thoracotomy incisions on their own just lead to
                                  poor visualisation, and resultant unsafe surgery.
                                    While minimally invasive thoracic surgery has benefits for the patient
                                  in terms of reduced postoperative morbidity, there is notably also the
                                  benefit for the veterinarian of reduced postoperative care. There is often
                                  no need to maintain an indwelling chest drain postoperatively.
                                    It should be obvious, as regards personal professional ethics as well
                                  as  veterinary  jurisprudence,  that  one  should  not  attempt  to  perform
                                  thoracoscopic  procedures  unless  already  familiar  with  standard  open
                                  thoracotomy techniques. Thoracoscopy is not an alternative to standard
                                  thoracic surgery, but a refinement. It still requires the same preoperative
                                  assessment, diagnostics and decision making. Conversion to a standard



                 Clinical Manual of Small Animal Endosurgery, First Edition. Edited by Alasdair Hotston Moore and
                 Rosa Angela Ragni.
                 © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2012 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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