Skip to main content
Canadian Journal of Surgery logoLink to Canadian Journal of Surgery
. 2000 Jun;43(3):191–196.

Lymph-node staining with activated carbon CH40: a new method for axillary lymph-node dissection in breast cancer

Takashi Yokota 1,, Toshihiro Saito 1, Yoichi Narushima 1, Kazutsugu Iwamoto 1, Masashi Iizuka 1, Akeo Hagiwara 1,*, Kiyoshi Sawai 1,*, Shu Kikuchi 1, Yasuo Kunii 1, Hidemi Yamauchi 1
PMCID: PMC3695160  PMID: 10851412

Abstract

Objective

To demonstrate the usefulness of activated carbon particles (CH40) as a vital staining dye for visualizing lymphatic vessels and lymph nodes in breast cancer.

Design

A retrospective evaluation.

Setting

Department of Surgery in Sendai National Hospital, Japan, a 716-bed teaching hospital.

Methods

To identify as many lymph nodes as possible in the axillary fat, by which we might decrease the possibility of the presence of undetected metastatic nodes, an emulsion of activated carbon particles (CH40) was injected into the centre of the mammary gland, close to the tumour site, 3 days before radical surgery.

Main outcome measure

The number of lymph nodes found by the traditional method and by the CH40-injection method were recorded.

Results

After injection, the CH40 was readily adsorbed into regional lymphatics and streamed along with the lymph flow to blacken regional lymph nodes. The CH40-guided method increased the mean number of nodes per case found in the axilla from 8.4, by the traditional method, to 14.0 nodes per case.

Conclusions

The use of the CH40 technique has two technical advantages; one is that it allows surgeons to locate the blackened lymph nodes at the time of surgery and the other is that it allows pathologists to look for the nodes in fatty tissue. Lymph-node dissection with the aid of activated carbon particles is inexpensive, easy to perform and enables the smallest lymph nodes to be easily recognized. CH40 is the technique of choice for the detection of axillary lymph nodes in cases where the number of lymph nodes detected by the traditional method is too small for accurate surgery. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates that CH40 could be an appropriate tool for more accurate staging of breast cancer axillary specimens.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (356.4 KB).


Articles from Canadian Journal of Surgery are provided here courtesy of Canadian Medical Association

RESOURCES