Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4281219 The American Journal of Surgery 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundWe report unusual and/or significant complications encountered during and after the Nuss Procedure for pectus excavatum.MethodsThis was a retrospective review that was approved by the institutional review board, with parental consent.ResultsSeven patients had unique and/or significant complications as follows: (1) laceration of an internal mammary artery during bar placement requiring emergent minithoracotomy; (2) hemopericardium 10 weeks postoperatively after blunt chest trauma requiring exploration of the pericardium and clot evacuation; (3) almost complete recurrence of the pectus excavatum deformity immediately after bar removal; (4 and 5) immediate/early postoperative bar displacement requiring re-operation and placement of 2 bars each; and (6 and 7) almost complete neo-ossification of the Nuss bar, making removal challenging.ConclusionsThe Nuss procedure has met with near-universal acceptance. Complications are just being reported. We describe 7 events to add to the evolving literature as the entire pediatric surgery community participates in the initial learning curve.

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