Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Pulmonary disease
- Part II Lung transplantation
- 11 Overview
- 12 Patient selection and indications for lung transplantation
- 13 Single and bilateral lung transplantation
- 14 Combined heart and lung transplantation
- 15 Anaesthesia and intensive care
- 16 Medical management
- 17 Immunological mechanisms of graft injury
- 18 Pharmacological immunosuppression
- 19 Chronic lung allograft dysfunction
- 20 Infectious complications
- 21 Cytomegalovirus infection
- 22 Imaging
- 23 Transplant pathology
- 24 Haematology
- 25 Psychology
- 26 The current status of lung transplantation
- Part III Future directions
- Index
13 - Single and bilateral lung transplantation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Pulmonary disease
- Part II Lung transplantation
- 11 Overview
- 12 Patient selection and indications for lung transplantation
- 13 Single and bilateral lung transplantation
- 14 Combined heart and lung transplantation
- 15 Anaesthesia and intensive care
- 16 Medical management
- 17 Immunological mechanisms of graft injury
- 18 Pharmacological immunosuppression
- 19 Chronic lung allograft dysfunction
- 20 Infectious complications
- 21 Cytomegalovirus infection
- 22 Imaging
- 23 Transplant pathology
- 24 Haematology
- 25 Psychology
- 26 The current status of lung transplantation
- Part III Future directions
- Index
Summary
Historical background
Success with clinical single lung transplantation was first described by the Toronto group in 1986 [1]. They built on a huge programme of experimental work going back almost 40 years. The basic surgical steps of lung transplantation had been set out by Metras in 1949 [2], much of the physiology being described in a series of experiments coming from the laboratory of Frank Veith in New York. The first human lung transplantation was performed as early as 1963 by Hardy [3]. This case was indeed notable because it demonstrated early function of a lung from a nonheart-beating donor. Other landmarks during the 1970s included an appreciation of the difficulties of ventilation–perfusion (VQ) mismatch in the setting of emphysema [4], and a patient in Belgium who lived for over six months, the latter demonstrating the physiological advantage of giving patients with restrictive disease a transplant [5]. The other theme running through these initial attempts was the problem of bronchial healing [5].
The Toronto group ascribed their success to solution of the bronchus problem (by wrapping with an omental pedicle), and an emphasis on case selection. They realized the advantages of giving a transplant to patients with fibrotic disease and the importance of adequate preoperative rehabilitation.
Evolution of isolated lung transplantation
Fibrotic disease is the ideal indication for a single lung transplant because both ventilation and perfusion are directed towards the graft. The very earliest attempts to perform single lung transplant for emphysema had been unsuccessful because of the preferential ventilation of the much more compliant native lung.
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- Lung Transplantation , pp. 132 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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