Mediastinoscopy
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What is the test?
Mediastinoscopy is a
surgery that allows doctors to view the middle of the chest cavity
and to do minor surgery through very small incisions. It allows
surgeons or pulmonary doctors to remove lymph nodes from between
the lungs and to test them for cancer or infection. It is also
useful for examining the outside surface of the large tubes of
the airways (such as the trachea) or for evaluating tumors or
masses in the middle chest.
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How do I prepare
for the test?
Discuss the specific
procedures planned during your mediastinoscopy ahead of time
with your doctor. This procedure is done by either a surgeon
or a trained pulmonary specialist. You will need to sign a consent
form giving your surgeon permission to perform this test.
If you are taking insulin,
discuss this with your doctor before the test. If you take aspirin,
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or other medicines that
affect blood clotting, talk with your doctor. It may be necessary
to stop or adjust the dose of these medicines before your test.
It is likely that you will be able to go home the same day as
the surgery, but you will need to arrange for someone else to
drive you home. This is because you will have received medicines
that can leave you drowsy for some hours after the procedure.
You will be told not
to eat anything for at least eight hours before the surgery.
An empty stomach helps prevent the nausea that can be a side
effect of anesthesia medicines.
Before the surgery (sometimes
on the same day), you will meet with an anesthesiologist to go
over your medical history (including medicines and allergies)
and to discuss the anesthesia.
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What happens
when the test is performed?
Mediastinoscopy is done
in an operating room. You wear a hospital gown and have an IV
(intravenous) line placed in your arm so that you can receive
medicines through it.
This procedure is almost
always done with general anesthesia, which puts you to sleep
so you are unconscious during the procedure. General anesthesia
is administered by an anesthesiologist, who asks you to breathe
a mixture of gases through a mask. After the anesthetic takes
effect, a tube is put down your throat to help you breathe. One
reason you need this tube is that your head is tilted far back
during the procedure. The tube keeps your throat safely open even
while your neck is bending backwards.
A very small incision
(less than an inch long) is made above your breastbone (sternum).
Carbon dioxide gas is allowed to flow into your chest through
this opening, while your lungs are made to slightly collapse,
giving your doctors a space within which to work. A tiny camera
on a tube, called a mediastinoscope, is then inserted through
the opening. Your doctor can see the work he or she is doing by
watching a video screen.
The doctor makes one
or two other small incisions to allow additional instruments
to reach into your chest. These incisions are usually made next
to your sternum, between ribs. A wide variety of instruments
are useful in mediastinoscopy. These include instruments that
can clip away a lymph node and remove it through one of the small
chest incisions. Other instruments can be used to stop bleeding
blood vessels by using a small electrical current to seal them
closed.
At the end of your surgery,
the instruments are removed, the lungs are reinflated, and the
small incisions are stitched closed. The anesthesia is stopped
so that you can wake up within a few minutes of your procedure,
although you will remain drowsy for a while afterward.
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What risks are
there from the test?
You will have a small
straight scar (less than an inch long) wherever the instruments
were inserted. You may have some discomfort for a few days in
the areas of the incisions. Sometimes work in the middle chest
can temporarily injure a nerve, which can weaken your vocal cord
muscles for a while and cause hoarseness. In rare cases, bleeding
complications might require a transfusion or larger chest surgery.
Air leaks from the lung can also occur and occasionally require
additional treatment such as a drainage tube, called a chest
tube, that is placed into the chest between your ribs and left
there for a few days.
General anesthesia is
safe for most patients, but it is estimated to result in major
or minor complications in 3%-10% of people having surgery of
all types. These complications are mostly heart and lung problems
and infections.
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Must
I do anything special after the test is over?
You should notify your
doctor if you experience fever, shortness of breath, shoulder
pain, or chest pain. You should not drive or drink alcohol for
the rest of the day.
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How
long is it before the result of the test is known?
Your doctor can tell
you how the surgery went as soon as it is finished. If biopsy
samples were taken, these often require several days to be examined.
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