Surgical Scars Flashcards

0
Q

Determinants of laparoscopic port placements?

A

Away from areas of high risk (previous scars, adhesions, organomegaly)
Vessels of anterior abdominal wall should be avoided, esp inferior epigastric artery
Minimum number of ports possible should be used
Positioned so as to have the target organ at the apex of an imaginary diamond
10mm port for camera and removal of organs (gallbladder)
5mm port for all others

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1
Q

Advantages and disadvantages of laparoscopic surgery

A

Advantages:
Shorter hospital stay and rehabilitation, less post-op pain, better cosmetic result, less wound complications, decreased handling of organs (bowel), less trauma to tissues, reduced incidence of post-op adhesions

Disadvantages: longer operation time, less tactile feedback to surgeon, more technical expertise required, expensive equipment, difficulty in controlling massive bleeding, increased risk of iatrogenic injury to surrounding organs, not always feasible due to contraindications (adhesions)

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2
Q

Advantages and disadvantages of midline laparotomy scar

A
Advantages: 
Provides good access
Can be easily extended
Speed of closure and opening
Relatively avascular (linea alba)

Disadvantages:
Incision more painful than transverse incision
Scar crosses Langer’s lines, poor cosmetic appearance
Narrow linea alba below umbilicus, therefore it can damage the bladder

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3
Q

When surgical scar is visible

A
Try name it eponymously
Describe scar, location, length
Possible reasons for scar
Determine recent or old
*check for incisional hernias, patient cough or raise head off the bed*
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4
Q

Midline laparotomy scar

A

Exploratory laparotomy, hemicolectomy, Hartmanns, AAA repair
Upper: splenectomy (massive)
Lower: paraumbilical hernia repair, colectomy

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5
Q

Kocher’s or right subcostal scar

A

Open cholecystectomy, partial liver resection, any biliary surgery

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6
Q

Reversed Kocher’s or left subcostal scar

A

Open splenectomy

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7
Q

Double Kocher’s or rooftop scar or right and left subcostal scar

A

Oesophagectomy, complex pancreatic/gastric surgery

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8
Q

Mercedes scar or extended rooftop scar

A

Complex upper GI surgery eg gastrectomy, McKeown oesophagectomy

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9
Q

Left nephrectomy scar or loin incision

A

Nephrectomy or specialist renal surgery

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10
Q

McBurney’s scar

A

Appendicectomy

McBurney’s point: imaginary midpoint between ASIS and umbilicus

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11
Q

Pfannenstiel (Panty line bilateral scar)

A

Gynaecological: Caesarean section, cystectomy, hysterectomy

Pelvic surgery: bladder resection, prostectomy, bilateral hernia repairs

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12
Q

Rutherford Morrison (RIF concave rounded scar)

A

Renal transplant

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13
Q

What structures would you go through in an appendicectomy scar?

A

Skin, subcutaneous tissue
Scarpa’s fascia, linea alba
Muscles layers: external oblique, internal oblique then transverse abdominis
Transversalis fascia
Extra peritoneal fat then parietal peritoneum

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14
Q

What structures would you go through in the midline laparotomy scar?

A

Skin, subcutaneous tissue
Scarpa’s fascia, linea alba
Transversalis fascia
Extraperitoneal fat then parietal peritoneum

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