A comparison of chest tubes versus bulb-suction drains in pediatric thoracic surgery.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-1-2007

Identifier

DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2006.12.061

Abstract

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Chest tubes are commonly used to evacuate the pleural space of air and fluid after thoracic surgery. The safety and efficacy of postoperative traditional chest tubes (CTs) versus soft bulb-suction drains (BDs) in the management of pediatric patients undergoing thoracic procedures were investigated.

METHODS: An institutional review board-approved, retrospective review was performed on all patients who required noncardiac, nontraumatic thoracic operations from January 2000 to December 2005. Patient data included BD or CT drainage, age at operation, indication for surgery, open or thoracoscopic approach, days of postoperative drainage, the development of a postremoval pneumothorax, and complications. Statistical comparisons were made using t test and chi2 test.

RESULTS: During the study period, 186 patients with complete records underwent a thoracic operation. One hundred twenty (65%) received a CT, whereas 66 (35%) received a BD. Patients who received CT averaged 5.6 days of drainage compared with 4.4 days in the group that received BD. Postremoval pneumothorax developed in 5 (4%) patients with CT compared with 4 (6%) patients with BD. Two patients in the CT group required reinsertion of another CT. None of the BD patients required further intervention.

CONCLUSION: For thoracoscopic and open thoracic operations, BDs are as safe and efficacious as traditional CT.

Journal Title

Journal of pediatric surgery

Volume

42

Issue

5

First Page

812

Last Page

814

MeSH Keywords

Adolescent; Chest Tubes; Chi-Square Distribution; Child; Child, Preschool; Drainage; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Retrospective Studies; Thoracic Surgical Procedures; Thoracoscopy

Keywords

Chest tube; Drainage

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