Journal of pediatric surgery
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The absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2) used for positive pressure pneumoperitoneum may lead to an increased CO2 load. CO2 elimination during laparoscopy has not been investigated previously in paediatrics. The aim of this study was to characterise the pattern of CO2 elimination during laparoscopic surgery in infants and children. ⋯ During pneumoperitoneum, younger children absorb proportionately more CO2 than older individuals. The short-lived increase in CO2 elimination postdesufflation may be related to an increase in venous return from the lower limbs after release of the abdominal pressure. These findings suggest that small children warrant close monitoring during laparoscopy and during the immediate postoperative period.
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Prenatal tracheal occlusion currently is being assessed as a treatment modality for congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). The development of a totally percutaneous fetoscopic access system would help avoid the need for maternal laparotomy and reduce the morbidity rate of fetal surgical procedures for the mother. Laparoscopic radial expansion sheaths and Seldinger technique-based vascular catheters both have been advocated as means of achieving amniotic cavity access. The authors have investigated these 2 systems in an attempt to develop a reliable method for achieving safe percutaneous fetoscopic access and present the first successful attempt to deploy an intratracheal balloon using an entirely percutaneous approach through a single port in an ovine model. ⋯ This modified Seldinger technique using the unique properties of the memory-shaped alloy wire for initial uterine access offers a safe method for the percutaneous placement of fetoscopic ports in the ovine model for prenatal intervention. Successful placement of a tracheal balloon entirely through a single percutaneously placed port represents a further advance in prenatal therapy for CDH.
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Secondary organ damage to the lungs is an important consequence of intestinal ischaemia reperfusion (IIR) injury. Moderate hypothermia ameliorates gut necrosis and liver energy failure after IIR but potential beneficial effects on lung neutrophil infiltration after reperfusion of ischaemic bowel have not been investigated. ⋯ These results indicate that moderate hypothermia may prevent damage to another distant organ, ie the lungs, by preventing recruitment of neutrophils. This may be of benefit in decreasing distal organ damage in diseases in which intestinal ischaemia-reperfusion is implicated in the pathogenesis.