| Literature DB >> 35242638 |
Jie Wang1, Zhihua Li1, Shubo Fan1, Shengwei Xiong1, Changwei Yuan1, Chang Meng1, Jun Zhang1, Xiaowei Zhang1, Peng Zhang2, Mingfei Ji3, Jie Chen3, Kunlin Yang1, Xuesong Li1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To describe our technical experience of robotic appendiceal onlay flap ureteroplasty (RAUP) for complex ureteral stricture disease and report the updated analysis of 18-month follow-up outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Ureteral stricture; appendix; onlay technique; reconstruction; robotics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35242638 PMCID: PMC8824821 DOI: 10.21037/tau-21-840
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Figure 1Patient position & port placement, and the examples of different degrees of ureteral strictures. (A) Patients were placed in a lateral decubitus position with the right side elevated by 90°. Laparoscopic trocar was marked as a red dot. Robotic arm trocars were marked as blue dots. Assistant trocars were marked as black dots. General anaesthesia with nasotracheal intubation (yellow arrow); (B) port placement for robotic appendiceal onlay flap ureteroplasty; (C) the posterior wall of the ureteral stricture was smooth and flat (yellow arrow); (D) the appendiceal onlay flap with mesentery was anastomosed on the anterior wall (white arrow) to cover the posterior wall (yellow arrow); (E) the lumen of the ureteral stricture was obliterative, the obliterative segment was resected, and normal ureteral tissue of the posterior wall was anastomosed. Then, a new ureteral plate was created (yellow arrow); (F) the appendiceal onlay flap with mesentery was anastomosed on the anterior wall (white arrow) to cover the posterior wall (yellow arrow).
Figure 2Schematic diagram of appendiceal onlay flap ureteroplasty. (A) Exposing the area of operation and probing the appendix; (B) mobilizing the right colon; (C) resecting the appendix from the caecum with the mesoappendix preserved; (D) managing the ureteral strictures, rebuilding the posterior wall, and leaving a defect in the anterior wall; (E) creating an appendiceal onlay flap with its mesoappendix preserved, and its length was the same as the defect of the anterior wall; (F) the appendiceal onlay flap was anastomosed on the anterior wall.
Figure 3Imaging examinations of case 4 and case 7. (A) Preoperative anterograde and retrograde urography of case 7; (B) the postoperative IUE of case 7 showed that the ureter was unobstructed; (C) preoperative anterograde and retrograde urography of case 4; (D) the postoperative cine MRU of case 4 showed that the ureter was unobstructed. IUE, imaging urodynamics examination; MRU, magnetic resonance urography.
Demographic and preoperative characteristics
| No. | Sex | Age, years | Body mass index, kg/m2 | Stenosis aetiology | Stenosis location/length, cm | Previous management | P N or D |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 39 | 24.8 | Iatrogenic | Proximal/3.5 | None | N |
| 2 | M | 36 | 22.0 | Iatrogenic | Middle/4.0 | Balloon dilatation | D |
| 3 | M | 41 | 23.1 | Iatrogenic | Proximal/4.0 | Balloon dilatation | N |
| 4 | M | 33 | 24.2 | Idiopathic | Middle/5.0 | Balloon dilatation | D |
| 5 | M | 37 | 24.1 | Iatrogenic | Proximal/4.5 | Balloon dilatation | D |
| 6 | F | 46 | 31.5 | Idiopathic | Proximal/6.0 | None | D |
| 7 | F | 28 | 22.5 | Iatrogenic | Middle/4.5 | None | N |
| 8 | M | 48 | 22.3 | Iatrogenic | Proximal/3.0 | Endoureterotomy | N |
| Mean | – | 38.5 | 24.3 | – | 4.3 | – | – |
P N or D, preoperative nephrostomy or double-J stents.
Intraoperative and postoperative data
| No. | Operation time, min | Estimated blood loss, mL | Posterior augmented anastomosis, yes/no | Postoperative hospital stays, days | Follow-up, months | Postoperative complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 135 | 50 | No | 9 | 28 | None |
| 2 | 145 | 100 | No | 6 | 25 | None |
| 3 | 211 | 50 | Yes | 8 | 25 | Fever |
| 4 | 182 | 200 | No | 12 | 24 | None |
| 5 | 182 | 30 | Yes | 12 | 14 | None |
| 6 | 137 | 30 | No | 6 | 12 | D-J stent prolapse |
| 7 | 139 | 100 | Yes | 4 | 12 | None |
| 8 | 163 | 60 | Yes | 5 | 6 | None |
| Mean | 162 | 78 | – | 8 | 18 | – |
Figure 4Imaging examinations of case 6. (A) Preoperative retrograde urography of case 6, which had the longest ureteral strictures (6 cm) in our cohort; (B) the cine MRU at 3 months after the operation showed that the right renal calyces, pelvis, and the proximal and middle ureters were dilated (white arrows); (C) the preoperative enhanced CT showed right hydronephrosis; (D) enhanced CT 6 months after surgery showed that right hydronephrosis was significantly relieved. MRU, magnetic resonance urography; CT, computed tomography.