2020
DOI: 10.5152/dir.2020.19202
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Effectiveness of autologous blood injection in reducing the rate of pneumothorax after percutaneous lung core needle biopsy

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…After that, scholars have continued to explore various plugging materials and plugging procedures. For example, Turgut et al 10 proposed that the incidence of pneumothorax of 91 patients was 14.1% after the puncture channel was blocked by autologous blood, while the incidence of pneumothorax of 171 patients without puncture channel plugging was 26.3%. Baadh et al 30 used hemostatic gelatin powder to block the puncture channel, and the probability of thoracic tube placement was reduced from 8.1 to 4%, but the disadvantage was that it was expensive.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After that, scholars have continued to explore various plugging materials and plugging procedures. For example, Turgut et al 10 proposed that the incidence of pneumothorax of 91 patients was 14.1% after the puncture channel was blocked by autologous blood, while the incidence of pneumothorax of 171 patients without puncture channel plugging was 26.3%. Baadh et al 30 used hemostatic gelatin powder to block the puncture channel, and the probability of thoracic tube placement was reduced from 8.1 to 4%, but the disadvantage was that it was expensive.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The results of the two studies performed by Iguchi and Zhong (12,13) using a hook wire did not provide a protective factor for pneumothorax. Among 262 patients who underwent biopsy of lung space-occupying lesions, Turgut et al (14) injected blood clots through the puncture needle sheath along the needle path in 91 patients and found that only 13 developed pneumothorax, whereas only 45 of the 171 patients in whom blood clots were not injected developed pneumothorax. Filippo et al (15) divided pulmonary puncture-induced bleeding into two types: type I was defined as bleeding along the needle puncture path; and type II was defined as bleeding around the lesion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using intermittent CT fluoroscopic guidance, an introducer needle was advanced into the target lesion and cores obtained (Bard Monopty or Bard Max-Core; Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey). During the removal of the introducer needle, approximately 3-10 mL of autologous blood was injected into the pulmonary parenchyma along the needle track to reduce the incidence of pneumothorax using the previously described methods (18,19,21,22). The use of blood patching progressively increased over the duration of this study.…”
Section: Research Highlightsmentioning
confidence: 99%