| Literature DB >> 23024892 |
Hsing-Ying Lin1, Chen-Han Huang, Shannon Shy, Yu-Chung Chang, Hsiang-Chen Chui, Tsung-Chih Yu, Chih-Han Chang.
Abstract
Bile duct injury (BDI) is the most serious iatrogenic complication during laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) and occurs easily in inexperienced surgeons since the position of common bile duct (CBD) and its related ductal junctions are hard to precisely identify in the hepatic anatomy during surgery. BDI can be devastating, leading to chronic morbidity, high mortality, and prolonged hospitalization. In addition, it is the most frequent injury resulting in litigation and the most likely injury associated with a successful medical malpractice claim against surgeons. This study introduces a novel method for conveniently and rapidly indicating the anatomical location of CBD during LC by the direct fiber-optic illumination of 532-nm diode-pumped solid state laser through a microstructured plastic optical fiber to avoid the wrong identification of CBD and the injury from mistakenly cutting the CBD that can lead to permanent and even life threatening consequences. Six porcine were used for preliminary intra-CBD illumination experiments via laparotomy and direct duodenal incision to insert the invented CBD illumination laser catheter with nonharmful but satisfactory visual optical density.Entities:
Keywords: (170.1610) Clinical applications; (170.2680) Gastrointestinal; (170.2945) Illumination design
Year: 2012 PMID: 23024892 PMCID: PMC3447540 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.3.001964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732
Fig. 1(a) The schematic diagram of a common plastic optical fiber fabricated into a choledochoilluminating drainage device. (b) Upper left: microscopic image of the laser fabricated periodic microstructures. Scale bar: 20 μm. Upper right: picture of light illumination from laser-fabricated microstructure windows. Scale bar: 50 mm. Lower: picture of green laser light emission from the front-end 10-cm length of optical fiber which was featured of periodic microstructures on the cladding portion by picosecond laser micromachining. (c) The optical configuration of illumination unit. Fiber collimator is the combination of a 20× microscope objective and a fiber clamp. (d) The picture of current illumination unit.
Fig. 2(a) A common plastic optical fiber without laser-fabricated microstructures and not encapsulated inside an ENBD tube was inserted into the papilla. The measured optical power was 6.9 W/cm2. (b) A plastic optical fiber with laser-fabricated microstructure of light-emission windows but not encapsulated inside an ENBD catheter was passing through the duodenal papilla and entering the CBD. The green emission from microstructure windows of optical fiber clearly illuminates the entire section of CBD under room light. The measured optical power was 42.1 W/cm2. (c) The same optical fiber and optical power in (b) brightened the CBD in the dark.
Fig. 3Relative intensity analysis by the image processing. The plastic optical fiber with laser-fabricated microstructure of light-emission windows but not encapsulated inside an ENBD catheter was passing through the duodenal papilla and entering the CBD. The laser power was (a) 3, (b) 13.7, (c) 27.5, and (d) 41.1 W/cm2, respectively. (e) shows the quantitative comparison results of the relative intensity of visible green light with respect to different introduced laser power. Insets show the transformed light intensity distribution images as the white dot-line square regions marked in (a)(d).
Fig. 4(a) A compact choledochoilluminating catheter was passing through the papilla (as the indication of white arrow) entering the CBD. (b) An optical fiber with laser-fabricated microstructure of light-emission windows encapsulated inside an ENBD catheter was placed in the CBD. The green illumination clearly indicates the CBD under room light (as the indication of yellow arrow). The measured optical power was 10.8 W/cm2.