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  • Lobar Lung Transplantation: A Single-Center 10-Year Experience
    Publication . Cruz, Z; Neri, F; Roxo, M; Figueiredo, C; Moita, C; Costa, AR; Santos Silva, J; Reis, J; Maciel Barbosa, J; Calvinho, P; Semedo, L
    Background: The shortage of donors for lung transplants is the main limitation of the preceding. Lobar transplantation is an alternative especially useful in patients with short stature and small thoracic cavities. The aim of this study was to perform a descriptive analysis of Portuguese patients who underwent lobar lung transplantation. Methods: A retrospective study was conducted, and patients submitted to lobar lung transplantation from January 2012 to December 2023 were evaluated. A descriptive analysis was made, including demographic data, lung diseases, waiting list dynamics, pre-transplant evaluations, and post-transplant outcomes. Results: Sixteen lobar transplants were performed with a predominance of female patients and a median age of 47 years. Most patients had interstitial lung disease or bronchiectasis either due to cystic fibrosis or non-cystic fibrosis. The median predicted total lung capacity (pTLC) ratio was 0.73. The median waiting list time was 6 months with 9 urgent transplants and 1 emergent lobar retransplant. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) was used in pre-, intra-, and postoperative periods. Most transplanted lobes were the median lobe (ML) + right upper lobe (RUL) and left upper lobe (LUL). The median length of stay was 58 days, with complications such as PDG grade 3, bronchial tree ischemia, and concentrical stenosis of bronchial anastomosis. Six patients died in this period, 1 in the immediate postoperative period and 5 during the post-transplant hospitalization, with a median survival of 20.7 months and a 1-year and 5-year survival rate of 60%. Conclusion: Our results show a population with an increased waiting list converging in many urgent cases, with an early mortality and high primary graft dysfunction rate. Nevertheless, mid- and long-term survival are promising.
  • Experimental Protocols to Test Aortic Soft Tissues: a Systematic Review
    Publication . Valente, R; Mourato, A; Xavier, J; Sousa, P; Domingues, T; Tavares, P; Avril, S; Tomás, A; Fragata, J
    Experimental protocols are fundamental for quantifying the mechanical behaviour of soft tissue. These data are crucial for advancing the understanding of soft tissue mechanics, developing and calibrating constitutive models, and informing the development of more accurate and predictive computational simulations and artificial intelligence tools. This paper offers a comprehensive review of experimental tests conducted on soft aortic tissues, employing the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) methodology, based on the Scopus, Web of Science, IEEE, Google Scholar and PubMed databases. This study includes a detailed overview of the test method protocols, providing insights into practical methodologies, specimen preparation and full-field measurements. The review also briefly discusses the post-processing methods applied to extract material parameters from experimental data. In particular, the results are analysed and discussed providing representative domains of stress-strain curves for both uniaxial and biaxial tests on human aortic tissue.
  • Extracorporeal Life Support Use in Limited Lung Function: a Narrative Review
    Publication . Santos Silva, J; Cabral, D; Calvinho, P; Olland, A; Falcoz, PE
    Background and objective: In thoracic surgery, different modalities of extracorporeal life support (ECLS) can be used for cardiorespiratory support in complex scenarios. Decades of learning in clinical practice and physiology associated with technological development led to a great variety of ECLS technologies available. Thoracic surgery procedures with difficult or impossible single lung ventilation may still be performed using different ECLS modalities. The aim of this review is to describe the use of ECLS, with its different modalities, as a solution to perform complex surgeries in a patient with difficult or impossible single lung ventilation. Methods: A literature review was conducted using the terms "extracorporeal life support pulmonary resection" and "extracorporeal life support thoracic surgery", and articles were selected according to defined criteria. Key content and findings: To support lung function during thoracic surgery, the most efficient and popular variety of ECLS is venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Lung resection on a single lung after pneumonectomy, surgery in a patient with severe hypercapnia and/or low respiratory reserve, carinal and airway surgery, and severe thoracic trauma are the main examples of situations where ECLS may be the solution to provide a safe surgical environment in patients who cannot tolerate single lung ventilation. Multidisciplinarity, selection of patients and careful surgical planning are cornerstones in defining the situations that may benefit from ECLS support. Conclusions: Knowledge on techniques of ECLS are essential for every thoracic surgeon. Although rarely used, these techniques of cardiorespiratory support should be considered when planning complex cases with difficulties in ventilation and emergent situations.
  • Predicting Post-Discharge Complications in Cardiothoracic Surgery: a Clinical Decision Support System to Optimize Remote Patient Monitoring Resources
    Publication . Santos, R; Ribeiro, B; Sousa, I; Santos, J; Guede-Fernández, F; Dias, P; Carreiro, A; Gamboa, H; Coelho, P; Fragata, J; Londral, A
    Cardiac surgery patients are highly prone to severe complications post-discharge. Close follow-up through remote patient monitoring can help detect adverse outcomes earlier or prevent them, closing the gap between hospital and home care. However, equipment is limited due to economic and human resource constraints. This issue raises the need for efficient risk estimation to provide clinicians with insights into the potential benefit of remote monitoring for each patient. Standard models, such as the EuroSCORE, predict the mortality risk before the surgery. While these are used and validated in real settings, the models lack information collected during or following the surgery, determinant to predict adverse outcomes occurring further in the future. This paper proposes a Clinical Decision Support System based on Machine Learning to estimate the risk of severe complications within 90 days following cardiothoracic surgery discharge, an innovative objective underexplored in the literature. Health records from a cardiothoracic surgery department regarding 5 045 patients (60.8% male) collected throughout ten years were used to train predictive models. Clinicians' insights contributed to improving data preparation and extending traditional pipeline optimization techniques, addressing medical Artificial Intelligence requirements. Two separate test sets were used to evaluate the generalizability, one derived from a patient-grouped 70/30 split and another including all surgeries from the last available year. The achieved Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve on these test sets was 69.5% and 65.3%, respectively. Also, additional testing was implemented to simulate a real-world use case considering the weekly distribution of remote patient monitoring resources post-discharge. Compared to the random resource allocation, the selection of patients with respect to the outputs of the proposed model was proven beneficial, as it led to a higher number of high-risk patients receiving remote monitoring equipment.
  • Pneumonectomy in a Child with Necrotic Lung after Ingestion of a Button Battery
    Publication . Stilwell, R; Silva, C; Alves, R; Afonso, I; Calvinho, P; Malta, AC
  • Mechanical Circulatory Support in Children: Strategies, Challenges and Future Directions
    Publication . Abreu, S; Brandão, C; Trigo, C; Rodrigues, R; Pinto, F; Fragata, J
    Introduction: The use of mechanical circulatory support (MCS) in the pediatric population has evolved significantly in the past 20 years, but its management still poses several challenges. We aim to describe patient characteristics, outcomes, and morbidity associated with different modalities of MCS, in a tertiary center. Methods: Retrospective analysis of data from all the children who underwent MCS between 2002 and 2018 at a pediatric cardiology unit. Results: Between 2002 and 2018, 22 devices were implanted in 20 patients. Patients were divided into three groups: Group A (n=11) extracorporeal membrane oxygenator (ECMO); Group B (n=8) pulsatile paracorporeal ventricular assist device (VAD) and group C (n=3) paracorporeal continuous flow VAD. The median age was similar in groups A and B (18 and 23 months, respectively), and higher in group C (13 years). ECMO patients were cannulated mainly as a bridge to recovery (post cardiotomy- 8) while group B and C patients were bridged to transplantation. The most frequent complications were bleeding (group A - 36%, group C - 66.6%) and thromboembolic events (group B - 50%, group C - 33.3%). As for outcomes, in group A the majority of patients (54.5%) were weaned and 27.3% died. Half of group B and all of group C patients underwent transplantation. Conclusion: Bleeding and thromboembolic events were the main complications observed. Group B showed the highest mortality, probably related to the low weight of the patients. Overall, outcomes and complications are related to the type of device and patient status and characteristics.
  • Results of Surgery Versus Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for Lung Cancer
    Publication . Costa, R; Aires, F; Rodrigues, D; Paiva, A; Maciel, J; Fernandes, P
  • Blunt Trauma and Right Diaphragmatic Rupture: Unveiling the Impact
    Publication . Alves, D; Sousa, J; Eurico Reis, J; Ribeiro, R; Calvinho, P
    Traumatic diaphragmatic ruptures are rare, yet blunt injuries tend to be more easily overlooked compared to penetrating trauma. The minimal evidence of external injuries makes a high index of suspicion key for diagnosis. We report the case of a right-sided thoracoabdominal blunt trauma that resulted in a diaphragmatic rupture and fractured rib. Although often approached through a midline laparotomy, a definitive right thoracotomy repair was exceptionally performed since the adjacent peritoneum remained uninjured.
  • Reproducibility and Validity of the Portuguese Edmonton Frail Scale Version in Cardiac Surgery Patients
    Publication . Castro, ML; Alves, M; Martins, A; Papoila, AL; Botelho, MA; Fragata, J
    Introduction: Frailty is a multidimensional syndrome characterized by the loss of functional reserve, associated with higher mortality and less functional survival in cardiac surgery patients. The Edmonton Frail Scale (EFS) is a comprehensive tool devised for brief frailty detection. To the best of our knowledge, there are no culturally adapted and validated frailty screening tools that enable the identification of vulnerability domains suited for use in the preoperative setting in Portugal. This was the motivation for this study. Objectives: To assess the validity and reproducibility of the Portuguese version of the EFS. Methods: Prospective observational study, in a sample of elective cardiac surgery patients. The Edmonton Frail Scale (EFS) translation and backtranslation were performed. Demographic and clinical data were collected, and the translated EFS translated, Geriatric Depression Scale, and Mini Mental State Examination Portuguese versions, Katz and Clinical Frailty Scales were administered. To assess validity Mann-Whitney test, Spearman's correlation coefficient, marginal homogeneity test and Kappa coefficient were employed. Reproducibility was assessed estimating kappa coefficient for the frailty diagnosis and the 11 EFS items. Intra-class correlation coefficients and the corresponding 95% confidence interval were estimated using linear mixed effects model. Results: The EFS Portuguese version revealed construct validity for frailty identification, as well as criterion validity for cognition and mood domains. Reproducibility was demonstrated, with k=0.62 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.42-0.82) and intraclass correlation (ICC)=0.94 (95% CI 0.89-0.97) in inter-observer test and k=0.48 (95% CI 0.26-0.70) and ICC=0.85 (95% CI 0.72-0.92) in intra-observer test. Conclusions: The EFS Portuguese version is valid and reproducible for use, suiting pre-operative frailty screening in a cardiac surgery setting.