RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the safety of outpatient or short-stay bilateral videothoracoscopy-assisted thoracic sympathectomy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The medical records of 445 who underwent bilateral videothoracoscopy-assisted thoracic sympathectomy were reviewed; the same protocols were used to guide these outpatient or short-stay procedures in all cases. Intravenous anesthesia was provided. An orotracheal tube allowed for carrying out the sympathectomy procedure during short periods of apnea. A 2% lidocaine solution was infused through the thoracic drains, which were removed soon after surgery. Data on intraoperative respiratory variables, pain, and intra- and postoperative complications were gathered. The data for patients undergoing the procedure on an outpatient or short-stay basis were compared. RESULTS: No significant differences in demographic or perioperative variables were found between the 2 groups. In 3.6% of the patients in the series, there was a record of a postoperative pulmonary complication: 4 therapeutic minithoracotomies; 1 subcutaneous emphysema without radiologic changes; 9 residual pneumothoraces, 2 requiring pleural drainage; 1 chylothorax; and 1 delayed hemothorax. With the exception of the late-developing hemothorax, all complications were diagnosed and treated in the immediate postoperative period. In the outpatient surgery group, unplanned admissions because of patient refusal to leave occurred in 6.5% of the cases. CONCLUSION: The low incidence of complications, and especially the finding that complications are detected in the early recovery period, indicate that this procedure can be performed on an outpatient basis.