| Literature DB >> 34269879 |
Salomone Di Saverio1,2, Kostantinos Stasinos3, Weronyka Stupalkowska3, Umberto Bracale4, Pierpaolo Sileri5, Antonio Giuliani6, Giuseppe Nigri7, Efstratios Kouroumpas3, James M D Wheeler8, Giovanni Domenico Tebala9, Francesco Di Marzo10, Belinda De Simone11, Carlos Pastor Idoate12, Nicola De Angelis13, Roberto Cirocchi14, Patricia Tejedor15.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This How-I-Do-It article presents a modified Deloyers procedure by mean of the case of a 67-year-old female with adenocarcinoma extending for a long segment and involving the splenic flexure and proximal descending colon who underwent a laparoscopic left extended hemicolectomy (LELC) with derotation of the right colon and primary colorectal anastomosis.Entities:
Keywords: Colonic derotation; Complete mesocolic excision; Deloyers procedure; Embryology; Left extended colectomy; Splenic flexure carcinoma
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34269879 PMCID: PMC8847254 DOI: 10.1007/s00423-021-02240-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Langenbecks Arch Surg ISSN: 1435-2443 Impact factor: 2.895
Practical algorithm on SF carcinoma intraoperative decision-making
| Patients’ characteristics | Type and extent of surgical resection | Type of reconstruction |
|---|---|---|
| Elderly patient (> 70 yo), (with severe comorbidities, high ASA score) with locally advanced carcinomas and cN + , located proximal, distal or across the SF | Segmental SF resection | Colo-colic anastomosis |
| Patients < 70 yo, patients with locally advanced carcinomas and cN + , located in the distal third of the TC ± across the SF | Extended right colectomy with CME and CVL of the middle colic vessels | Ileo-descending or ileo-sigmoid anastomosis |
| Patients < 70 yo, patients with locally advanced carcinomas and cN + , located across the SF ± proximal descending colon | Extended left colectomy with CME and high ligation of the IMV and IMA | Colorectal anastomosis (between HF or proximal TC and the upper rectum) (possibility of performing a standard or modified Deloyers procedure) |
| Patients < 70 yo, with early colon carcinomas and cN-, located in the distal third of the TC ± across the SF | Segmental SF resection (ICG guided if ICG available) radical lymph node dissection along the middle colic and left colic vessels | Colo-colic anastomosis |
TC, transverse colon; SF, splenic flexure; ICG, indocyanine green; HF, hepatic flexure; yo, years old; IMV, inferior mesenteric vein; IMA, inferior mesenteric artery; CVL, central vascular ligation
Fig. 1Panel A—Entered lesser sac and dividing the embryologic adhesions of the TC mesentery. Panel B—Divide and open the Fredet’s fascia. Panels C and D—Toldt’s fascia is fully mobilized and the right colon is going up to reach the RUQ (visible the appendix over the duodeno-pancreatic head
Fig. 2Specimen with IMV and IMA stump taken at their origin
Fig. 3Specimen outside its length is demonstrated and transverse colon is exteriorized up the hepatic flexure, which is visible at the level of the wound protector (suprapubic incision)
Fig. 4Panel A—Colorectal anastomosis already stapled, SB on the right, no internal hernia, colon lying over the aorta. Panel B—Proximal colon going down to the pelvis but still on the left of the D-J flexure and of the SB. Panel C—Proximal colon going down to the pelvis on the left of the D-J flexure and the SB is only on the right side, no internal hernia. Panel D—Middle colic pedicle and its right branch visible going down at the medial side of the colon and aorta. No SB loops are left underneath the colon
Fig. 5Panel A—The SB loops are being pulled towards the right quadrants. Panel B—Left quadrants are then free and left without any small bowel. Panel C—The proximal colon is going down and care is taken to keep the SB on the right side. Panel D—Everything of the small bowel is on the right side. No internal hernias are left behind
Fig. 6Panel A—Dissection of the root of transverse colon mesentery with complete skeletonization and mobilization of the middle colic vessels pedicle aiming to get more length and reach without sacrificing the middle colic vessels. Panel B—Middle colic vessels fully mobilized and preserved seen from above (lesser sac). Panel C—Detail of the origin of the stump of Middle colic vessels fully mobilized and preserved. Panel D—Here It can be appreciated how much of reach has been obtained thanks to the mobilization of the root of TC mesentery and the tortuous long segment of middle colic vessels
Fig. 7LELC with a primary TC-rectal anastomosis achieved with a partial modified Deloyers by fully mobilizing the transverse colon, with a “middle colic vessel sparing” technique. a Laparoscopic extended left colectomy with CME and CVL. b Primary anastomosis is achieved by fully mobilizing the transverse colon, with a “middle colic vessel sparing” technique. c The fully mobilized mesocolon allows for a tension-free anastomosis while maintaining better blood supply to the mobilized stump and also by eliminating the need for a mesenteric window and the transposition of the caecum; the modified technique allows for the small bowel to rest over the colon and above the anastomosis and by keeping the mobilized transverse colon on the left of the D-J flexure and over the aortic line