Diagnostic pneumoperitoneum, which has been considered the first step of any laparoscopic procedure, is no longer an absolute necessity. We devised an alternative to pneumoperitoneum or abdominal insufflation by upward and outward traction on the anterior abdominal wall with a "hanger lifting method" using subcutaneous wiring. Fairly good room was produced intraabdominally, which was enough in which to perform the cholecystectomy procedure. We have successfully performed 40 cases of laparoscopic cholecystectomy with this procedure. No complication was experienced with this method and, moreover, excess instrumentation and complications related to pneumoperitoneum were avoided.
Abdominal wall lifting is a method to produce operative space between the anterior abdominal wall and the intra-abdominal organs during laparoscopic surgery. We devised a hanger lifting procedure for the anterior abdominal wall to avoid complications as well as reduce the costs related to the pneumoperitoneum. In our series, we performed 50 cases of laparoscopic cholecystectomy with this abdominal wall-lifting procedure. Though at the beginning we performed laparoscopic cholecystectomy by the pneumoperitoneum, we discarded the insufflator for this operation since starting the new procedure. There was no incidence of conversion to pneumoperitoneum and a fairly good operative view was achieved enabling a smooth laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
A 68-year-old man, admitted for the treatment of recurrent cholangitis after a pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) performed 3 years previously was diagnosed as having multiple hepaticolithiasis. On laparotomy, the hepatic artery was not recognized. The anastomosed common hepatic duct was obstructed, and a fistula had been formed between the right hepatic duct and the Roux limb of the jejunum. Lithotripsy was performed from this fistula and it was reanastomosed. Angiography was performed postoperatively and it revealed common hepatic artery injury, most likely to have occurred during the previous PD. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful and he has been asymptomatic for 8 months after the operation, indicating that reanastomosis of the fistula can be an effective method. The stricture of the anastomosis was suspected to be mainly due to cholangial ischemia, because no episode of anastomotic leak or retrograde biliary infection had occurred during the PD perioperative period. There are several reports of late stricture of anastomosis 5 or more years after cholangiojejunostomy. This patient, therefore, requires further long-term follow up.
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