| Literature DB >> 32514743 |
Giuseppe Navarra1, Iman Komaei2, Giuseppe Currò1, Luigi Angrisani3, Rosario Bellini4, Maria Rosaria Cerbone5, Nicola Di Lorenzo6, Maurizio De Luca7, Mirto Foletto8, Paolo Gentileschi9, Mario Musella10, Monica Nannipieri11, Luigi Piazza12, Stefano Olmi13, Vincenzo Pilone14, Marco Raffaelli15, Giuliano Sarro16, Antonio Vitiello17, Marco Antonio Zappa18, Diego Foschi19.
Abstract
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and its related disease, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), has been rapidly spreading all over the world and is responsible for the current pandemic. The current pandemic has found the Italian national health system unprepared to provide an appropriate and prompt response, heavily affecting surgical activities. Based on the limited data available in the literature and personal experiences, the Società Italiana di Chirurgia dell'OBesità e Malattie Metaboliche (SICOB) provides recommendations regarding the triage of bariatric surgical procedures during the COVID-19 pandemic defining a dedicated path for surgery in morbidly obese patients with known or suspected COVID-19 who may require emergency operations. Finally, the current paper delineates a strategy to resume outpatient visits and elective bariatric surgery once the acute phase of the pandemic is over. Models developed during the COVID-19 crisis should be integrated into hospital practices for future use in similar scenarios. Surgeons are presented with a golden opportunity to embrace systemic change and to drive their professional future.Entities:
Keywords: Bariatric surgery; COVID-19; Coronavirus; Obesity; Pandemic; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514743 PMCID: PMC7278242 DOI: 10.1007/s13304-020-00821-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Updates Surg ISSN: 2038-131X
Triage of surgical procedures in morbidly obese patients in COVID-19 pandemic (American College of Surgeons’ classification)
| Surgical procedure | Specific bariatric conditions | General surgical conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency surgery | Perforated marginal ulcer Bleeding Anastomotic or staple-line leak Intestinal obstruction (internal hernia) Gastric band perforation or prolapse | Hemorrhagic shock Septic shock Perforated viscus Intestinal obstruction Risk of ischemic bowel Necrotizing soft tissue infections |
| Urgent surgery | Revisions for dysphagia Severe GERD Dehydration/malnutrition Slipped band Anastomotic strictures | Appendicitis Acute cholecystitis Cholangitis, choledocolithiasis Acute pancreatitis Diverticular disease |
| Elective surgery | Sleeve gastrectomy primary roux en Y gastric bypass (RYGB) One anastomosis gastric bypass-mini gastric bypass (OAGB-MGB) Biliopancreatic diversion Gastric band Revisions for weight gain |
Fig. 1The path to safe decision-making on the surgical approach in the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic
Precautions during laparoscopic surgery in patients with known or suspected COVID-19 (modified recommendations by Zheng et al.)
| Personal protective equipment (PPE) | Enter the OR after the patient is intubated wearing full PPE including shoe covers, impermeable gowns, N-95 masks (if not available, consider mask with HEPA-filter insert or equivalent), protective head coverings, gloves, and eye goggles/face visors At the end of the surgery, everyone should de-gown and remove all PPE in the OR with the exception of N-95 mask and discard prior to leaving Wash hands immediately after the operation |
| Use of insufflators | If available, use insufflation devices which maintain a stable PNP and facilitate smoke evacuation and filtration with 0.01 microns ULPA filter. Use the lowest intra-abdominal pressure possible (< 10–12 mmHg advised) |
| Use of trocars | Use as small skin incisions as possible and the least number of trocars as possible In thin patients use balloon trocars Observe for any leakage from skin openings and try to reduce it by using suturing or other instruments Avoid introducing and switching instruments too regularly |
| Use of electrocautery and other energy devices | Set on electrocautery as low as possible Avoid long dissection times on the same spot to reduce smoke production |
| Evacuation of PNP | Use suction devices liberally to remove the smoke and aerosols Consider an outside filter, attached to a trocar, such as PlumePort® ActiV® or equivalent Do complete desufflation by suction device before specimen extraction, performing a mini-laparotomy, conversion to open surgery, or at the end of the procedure Do not open valves to evacuate smoke or gas |