Summary: | Massive haemoptysis is life‐threatening. Management options include pharmacological treatment, bronchial artery embolization, surgical resection, and bronchoscopic interventions. As an alternative treatment method of controlling haemoptysis, endobronchial stent insertion has been performed in several pulmonary carcinoma patients. We presented an 89‐year‐old bronchiectasis patient who developed massive haemoptysis from the right middle lobe bronchus. Haemoptysis was not controlled by both pharmacological treatment and bronchial artery embolization. Two customized silicone stents with the one in the right middle lobe bronchus and another in the right intermediate bronchus were used to manage haemoptysis. One month after stents implantation, the stent inside the right intermediate bronchus was removed, another stent was left in the right middle lobe bronchus to continue occluding the bleeding passageway. Haemoptysis did not occur after silicon stents deployment. This may be the first case of receiving straight silicon stent implantation to manage massive haemoptysis from the right middle lobe bronchus.
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