Introduction and importance: Despite the chance of a complete cure that surgery offers for patients seen early, the management of some complicated forms of chronic pyothorax with calcified pleural pockets of tuberculosis origin is risky, if not impossible. In these conditions, thoracomyoplasty with complete effacement of the pleural pocket is an effective alternative in the surgical management of these pockets.
Case presentation: We report the case of a 37-year-old male African Arab who was treated for a chronic, calcified pleural pocket of tuberculous origin and in whom low thoracomyoplasty was performed because of the impossibility of performing a left pleuropneumonectomy. The operating courses were uneventful with full pocket closures.
Review: 1 year later, the patient reported having resumed his active professional life.
Clinical discussion: Pleural decortication associated or not with a pulmonary resection is the main surgical procedure used to manage chronic pyothorax. However, this procedure remains difficult with the risk of death, if not impossible, in cases of long-term chronicity with calcification of the pleural poche wall. In these cases, thoracomyoplasty constitutes a viable alternative in the surgical management of these pleural pockets.
Conclusion: In the context of tuberculosis and chronic pleural empyema, thoracomyoplasty can be an alternative with satisfactory results when performed by an experienced team using this technique.
Keywords: Case report; Myoplasty; Pyothorax; Thoracic drainage; Thoracoplasty; Tuberculosis.
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