| Literature DB >> 20721586 |
Rogier P Voermans1, Mark I van Berge Henegouwen, Willem A Bemelman, Paul Fockens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Secure transluminal closure remains the most fundamental barrier to safe translation of transgastric natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES) procedures to humans. Obtaining optimal critical view of safety (CVS) is a prerequisite to performing cholecystectomy avoiding common bile duct injury.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20721586 PMCID: PMC3044824 DOI: 10.1007/s00464-010-1242-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Endosc ISSN: 0930-2794 Impact factor: 4.584
Fig. 1Laparoscopic images showing hybrid cholecystectomy: A fundus of the gallbladder being retracted endoscopically to expose the gallbladder bed; B critical view of safety. In the lower half the endoscopic clip can be seen
Fig. 2Images showing the Over-The-Scope-Clip (OTSC) system: A laparoscopic image showing the OTSC cap mounted on the tip of endoscope; B drawing depicting the twin grasper with one fixed middle branch and two independently mobile lateral branches
Summary of main outcome parameters of survival experiments (n = 16)
| Outcome parameter | Outcome | 95% CI or SD |
|---|---|---|
| Cholecystectomy | ||
| Adequate exposure of CVS | 16/16 (100%) | 81–100% |
| Successful cholecystectomy | 16/16 (100%) | 81–100% |
| Endoscopic closure | ||
| Immediate successful endoscopic closure | 16/16 (100%) | 81–100% |
| Histology-proven full-thickness closure | 16/16 (100%) | 81–100% |
| Complications | ||
| Access-related complications | 1/16 (6%) | 1–28% |
| Minor bleeding during cholecystectomy | 2/16 (13%) | 4–36% |
| Uncomplicated 10-day follow-up | 16/16 (100%) | 81–100% |
| Closure time | 7 min | SD 3 min |
| Total procedural time | 73 min | SD 23 min |
CI confidence interval, SD standard deviation, CVS critical view of safety
Fig. 3Images showing endoscopic gastrotomy closure: A endoscopic image showing macroscopically adequately closed gastrotomy using the Over-The-Scope-Clip; B laparoscopic image showing leak testing of the gastrotomy after closure by insufflating the stomach endoscopically and simultaneously spraying a water film laparoscopically. No leakage of air bubbles could be visualized through the inverted closed gastrotomy. Note the inverted, serosa-to-serosa closure
Fig. 4Image showing mucosal (A) and serosal (B) site of the gastrotomy at necropsy after 10 days survival