“…Sugarbaker and Mentzer 7 in 1992 published a technique for pulmonary artery stapling using two successive applications of the same stapler, and reloading without removing it, in order to address surgeons' reluctance to use vascular staplers of the TA-type in the pulmonary hilum. In contrast, Craig and Walker 8 in 1995 reported on 2 of 57 patients who underwent video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery lobectomy, who needed expeditious thoracotomy because of massive bleeding ensuing from vascular stapling Lobectomy complications list, n 40 (AF, n ¼ 10; PAL, n ¼ 11; chylothorax, n ¼ 2; atelectasis, n ¼ 6; pneumonia, n ¼ 3; stroke, n ¼ 1; ileus, n ¼ 2; DVT, n ¼ 2; PE, n ¼ 2; TIA, n ¼ 1) 10 having analyzed 3393 pulmonary artery and vein stapling applications on 4495 patients, with only a 0.27% adverse event rate, reported with reassurance that stapling of the pulmonary vasculature was safe. In our study we used only the conventional TA-30 vascular staplers for main pulmonary artery closures, during pneumonectomies, without any adverse events.…”