| Literature DB >> 33496955 |
Gianmattia Del Genio1, Claudio Gambardella2, Salvatore Tolone1, Luigi Brusciano1, Domenico Parmeggiani1, Mariachiara Lanza Volpe1, Francesco Saverio Lucido1, Ludovico Docimo1.
Abstract
Stapler-less laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) is emerging as a new potential affordable cost-effective alternative procedure. However, no pre-clinical data are currently available on human tissue. We aimed to evaluate whether traditionally suturing without the use of surgical stapling may produce a comparable bursting pressure on human gastric tissue. A prospective cohort of consecutive patients undergoing LSG was divided in two groups to compare a barbed extra-mucosal running suture (stapler-less) versus a standard stapler line. A burst pressure test was applied to the gastric specimen employing high-resolution manometric catheter. Type, location and features of the leak were described. We enrolled a total of 40 obese patients, 20 patients for each group. Median burst pressures of the stapler-less group resulted statistically significant increased (p < 0.0001) than the one in standard stapler group. In all cases, leak occurred along the surgical closure site independently from the used technique (group 1 vs 2; p = N.S.), more often at the proximal stomach (p < 0.05). In human ex vivo model, traditional surgical suture (i.e. running hand-sewn) produced an effective temporary closure, with superior resistance to increasing volume and pressure. How this may impact on clinical LSG outcomes needs further evaluations and was not the object of this study.Entities:
Keywords: Burst pressure; Leaks; Manometry; Sleeve gastrectomy; Stapler-less
Year: 2021 PMID: 33496955 PMCID: PMC8005392 DOI: 10.1007/s13304-021-00975-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Updates Surg ISSN: 2038-131X
Fig. 1Gastric specimen in stapler-less group. a Stapler line removal by electrothermal bipolar-activated device (LigaSure Atlas™, Valleylab, Boulder, CO, USA). b A stapler-less hand-sewn reconstruction was adopted. A single extra-mucosal running barbed suture (3/0V-Loc™ suture; Covidien, Mansfield, MA, USA), incorporating sero- and submucosal gastric layers, closed the gastric tube
Fig. 2The gastric specimen during burst pressure testing. A high-resolution manometry catheter is placed inside the gastric lumen, and this is filled with a NaCl 0.9% solution and methylene blue. Previously, the gastric specimen is resected to obtain a new linear staple line and a diameter similar to the sleeved stomach
Fig. 3The burst pressure is stopped when a serosal laceration is identified, and methylene blue is seen flowing out through the suture line
Fig. 4The CONSORT flow diagram. Statistical analysis was performed following a per-protocol approach
Preoperative demographics data of stapler-less (group 1) and stapler group (group 2). BMI (body mass index)
| Stapler-less group ( | Stapler group ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 35.2 ± 9* | 34.9 ± 7* | 0,157 |
| Male | 11 (55%) | 13 (65%) | 0,518 |
| Female | 9 (45%) | 7 (35%) | 0,518 |
| Weight kg | 132.9 (98–140)* | 133.3 (101–149)* | 0,064 |
| BMI | 45 (38–47)* | 46 (39–49)* | 0,4226 |
| ASA(I-II) (%) | 13 (65%) | 12 (60%) | 0,744 |
| ASA(III-IV)(%) | 7 (35%) | 8 (40%) | 0,744 |
| Diabetes mellitus (%) | – | – | – |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (%) | 2 (2%) | 3 (3%) | 0,632 |
| Hypertension (%) | 12 (60%) | 11 (55%) | 0,749 |
*Values are mean ± interquartile range. †Wilcoxon rank sum test for paired data
Fig. 5The graph bar comparing burst pressures recorded at high-resolution manometry (expressed in mmHg, y-axis) and saline volume (expressed in ml, y-axis). The difference between the hand-sewn and the stapled group was statistically significant for both the indicators (p < 0.0001)