Endobronchial or esophageal ultrasound
These tests can be used to look for cancer that has spread to lymph nodes or to find other problems in the area between the lungs. This area, which is under the breastbone, is called the mediastinum.
You will be given medicine to keep you comfortable. A long, thin, lighted tube (bronchoscope) is used to do an endobronchial ultrasound. It's put in through your mouth or nose and into your windpipe (trachea). The bronchoscope has an ultrasound transducer at its tip. The transducer gives off sound waves and picks up the echoes as they bounce off body tissues. A computer makes the echoes into an image on a screen. The transducer can be pointed in different directions to look at lymph nodes and other structures in the mediastinum. If the doctor sees suspicious areas, such as enlarged lymph nodes, a hollow needle can be passed through the scope to get biopsy samples of them. The samples are then sent to a lab for testing.
If an endobronchial ultrasound can't reach the area of concern, an esophageal ultrasound may be used instead. In this test, the scope is passed down the swallowing tube (esophagus) instead of the windpipe. It can also be used to look at lymph nodes in the mediastinum.
Mediastinoscopy or mediastinotomy
These tests can also be used to look at and biopsy lymph nodes between the lungs (in the mediastinum). An imaging test, such as a CT scan, may show enlarged lymph nodes. But a biopsy must be done to find out if they have cancer in them.
These tests are done by a surgeon. You are given anesthesia so you are asleep and don't feel pain. A small cut is made in the front of your neck for a mediastinoscopy. A small cut is made in your chest, between your ribs, for a mediastinotomy. A thin, lighted scope with a small camera on the end is put in through the cut. It's used to look at lymph nodes under your breastbone at the center of your chest. Special tiny tools can be passed through the scope to take out tissue. The removed tissue is sent to the lab to be checked for cancer.
Bone marrow biopsy
This test is rarely used. But you may need it if the doctor wants to see if the cancer has spread to the bone marrow. This is a thick, sponge-like liquid in the center of certain bones. This biopsy is done by putting a thick needle through your skin and into the back of your hip bone. Your skin and the bone is numbed first.