Peripheral pulmonary nodules are difficult to reach bronchoscopically, so for a long time it has been tried, by the use of imaging techniques like X-ray, ultrasound and computed tomography, to aspirate these nodules for exact histological diagnosis. The computed tomography offers the best spatial orientation for methodical reasons, thus this technique is performed increasingly and with great accuracy in pulmonary lesions. Complications like bleeding into lung parenchyma or small pneumothorax after aspiration can be detected easier by computed tomography. In this study we evaluated the use of a special bioptic technique with the AUTOVAC(R) needle in 30 cases. Causing low parenchymal damage to the lung, this bioptic needle enables extraction of representative tissue samples for further pathological examination. In 21 of 30 (70 %) cases the histological specimen led to the diagnosis of malignancy, but 8 of those malignant specimen could have been verified as primary or secondary malignancy by using additional immunocytochemical techniques. In 2 of 30 cases (7 %) harmless hemorrhage into lung parenchyma occured after aspiration. In another 4 of 30 (13 %) cases pneumothorax occurred, requiring chest tube placement. The ct-guided lung biopsy with the AUTOVAC(R) needle represents a safe, low resilient diagnostic tool to obtain large tissue samples of specimen in good quality. Even in patients with compromised lung function because of severe chronic obstructive lung disease and/or emphysema, the described aspiration technique can be performed, if at the moment of aspiration procedure a pneumologist with corresponding equipment and trained medical staff is present, in order to place a chest tube in case of pneumothorax.