Surgical endoscopy
-
The role of laparoscopic surgery in the management of colorectal cancer is controversial. This study was undertaken to determine the oncological adequacy, in terms of margins of resection, lymph node harvest, and anastomotic and locoregional recurrence of laparoscopic colectomy in patients with stage III (node-positive) colorectal cancer. ⋯ Based on this study, laparoscopic colectomy in patients with stage III colorectal cancer is oncologically adequate. It results in a long-term outcome comparable to that of traditional open surgery and is associated with low perioperative mortality and morbidity (lower wound infection rate, lower wound recurrences at trocar sites) and a shortened length of stay.
-
Herein we report the cause of a 46-year-old woman who presented with recurrent right pneumothorax following hysterectomy with right salpingo-oophorectomy for pelvic endometriosis. Video-assisted thoracoscopy revealed endometrial implants in the posterior parietal pleura and the middle lobe. ⋯ A partial pleurectomy was carried out to remove the endometrial foci in the parietal pleura; the remaining pleural surface was mechanically abraded. The favorable outcome was confirmed at 2-year follow-up.
-
Carbon dioxide is usually preferred as the insufflating agent for laparoscopic surgery because it is readily available, noncombustible, and chemically stable. It is still questionable, however, if CO2 pneumoperitoneum has any effect on free radicals and lipid peroxidation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the possible effects of CO2 pneumoperitoneum on free radicals and lipid peroxidation in the erythrocytes of rats. ⋯ These results indicate that CO2 pneumoperitoneum applied with 5-10 mmHg pressure increases the formation of free oxygen radicals by inhibiting SOD activity and that the accumulation of free radicals elevates the level of MDA, a metabolite of lipid peroxidation. The effect of CO2 pneumoperitoneum on free radicals and lipid peroxidation is pressure-dependent in rats. The mechanism underlying this pressure dependency is still under investigation.