• World Neurosurg · Jul 2017

    Use of Pneumoperitoneal Puncture for Peritoneal Catheter Placement in Lumboperitoneal Shunt Surgery:Technical Note.

    • Junhua He, Xin Jin, Xianghua Zhang, Jun Kong, Yihai Lin, Zhangyi Wu, and Xinwen Zhang.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Tongde Hospital of Zhejiang Province, HangZhou, China. Electronic address: hejunhuahz@126.com.
    • World Neurosurg. 2017 Jul 1; 103: 391-394.

    BackgroundIn hydrocephalus shunt surgery, a peritoneal catheter is traditionally inserted with laparotomy incision. The abdominal incision length will not be shorter than 3 cm in most cases. A longer incision has to be made in obese patients. The lateral position in lumboperitoneal shunt (LPS) surgery also increases the difficulty of laparotomy. This report introduces a simple technique of pneumoperitoneal puncture for peritoneal catheter placement in LPS surgery.MethodsTwenty-eight communicating hydrocephalus cases underwent pneumoperitoneal puncture in an LPS operation. Abdominal incision length, time for peritoneal catheter placement, and postoperative complications were recorded.ResultsThe length of the abdominal incision was 1 cm, and the average time for peritoneal catheter placement was 3.5 minutes. No patient suffered from infection and obstruction. Two cases of subdural hematoma because of cerebrospinal fluid overdrainage occurred.ConclusionsThe pneumoperitoneal puncture technique has proven, in our experience, to be a minimally invasive, simple, and reliable method in a peritoneal catheter placement procedure. This technique, which needs to be assessed further by larger case series, may be considered a new method of choice for peritoneal catheter placement in LPS surgery.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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