Laparoscopy Flashcards
1
Q
Laparoscopy risks
A
o Death 1:15,000
o Bowel injury 2:1000
o Vascular injury 1:1000
o Urological injury 0.5:1000
o Hernia at port site 1:100
o Bleeding, transfusion
o Infection
o Shoulder tip pain
o Conversion to open
o Adhesion formation
o Failure to achieve symptom improvement
o General risks
- Anaesthetic
- DVT/PE
- Pneumonia/atelectasis
2
Q
Procedure of laparoscopy
A
- Preparation
Appropriate informed consent
General anaesthesia
o bhCG
o Empty bladder, instrument uterus
o Position - Horizontal table
- Buttocks at edge of bed (but not off)
- Hips flexed and abducted, knees flexed (low lithotomy)
o Palpate aorta and sacral promontory - Entry technique
o Hasson – open technique
o Veress – closed technique - Check Veress prior
-Incision into skin - Insert veres needle perpendicular to sheath, then aim for centre of pelvis
- Test with aspiration, saline drop test, low insufflation pressure <8mmHg
- Intra-abdominal pressure 15-25mmHg prior to placement of primary-trochar to maximise distance from sheath to bowel
- Then reduce pressure to 15mmHg
o Direct optical entry – closed technique
o Palmer’s point - Indications
- Known umbilical adhesions
- History of umbilical hernia
- Failed insufflation at umbilicus
- Very thin patient
- Deflate stomach
- Palpate for hepatospenomegaly
- Place Veress 3cm below left costal margin in midclavicular line
- Following port placement, put camera in lateral port to inspect trochar entry point
3
Q
Comparison of entry points
A
- Comparison of entry techniques
o Bowel injury Veress<direct<open
o Vascular injury direct<open<Veress
o Cochrane concluded no evidence of advantage of any technique in preventing major vascular or visceral injuries
o Open entry had fewer failed entry rates compared to Veress
o Direct entry had fewer failed entry, less extraperitoneal insufflation and less
omental injury compared to Veress - Increased recognition of injury with direct visual entry