Pneumonectomy
Introduction Print Section Listen As long as surgery remains the best curative treatment for lung cancer, patients will continue to require pneumonectomy to treat lung cancer and for other occasional…
Introduction Print Section Listen As long as surgery remains the best curative treatment for lung cancer, patients will continue to require pneumonectomy to treat lung cancer and for other occasional…
Introduction Print Section Listen The multimodality management of inoperable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) – from early-stage disease to locally advanced presentations – has changed substantially over the past 20…
Introduction Print Section Listen The most effective treatment for early-stage (I–IIIA) non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is surgical resection. Despite optimal surgical techniques employed for the resections, a substantial percentage of…
Introduction Print Section Listen Bronchogenic carcinoma remains the most common cause of cancer death in both men and women in the United States. These tumors can exhibit local progression and…
Introduction Print Section Listen Segmentectomy was initially described by Churchill and Belsey1 in 1939 for the treatment of bronchiectasis. Although the operation is still used to treat suppurative and other…
Introduction Print Section Listen Airway neoplasms account for approximately 90% of carinal resections.1 The incidence of primary tracheal tumors is unclear, but is known to be rare. A recent population-based…
Anatomy of the Lung and Tracheobronchial Tree Print Section Listen The chest has two lungs (a right lung and a left lung) (Fig. 68-1). Each lung is divided into independent…
Introduction Print Section Listen Lung cancer is a silent killer. Symptoms are present in only approximately 40% of patients in a population screened for lung cancer who have radiographic changes.1…
Introduction Print Section Listen The development of brain metastasis in a patient with non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is an ominous prognostic sign. About 30% of individuals with NSCLC eventually develop…
Introduction Print Section Listen Endobronchial lesions are caused by a variety of benign and malignant disease processes. When such lesions obstruct the central airways, trachea, or mainstem bronchi, they quickly…