2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmig.2005.07.393
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High-pressure laparoscopic entry does not adversely affect cardiopulmonary function in healthy women

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Cited by 38 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The HR changes observed in the present study when intraperitoneal pressure returned to 12 mmHg in group P20 (TP3) were not reported by Abu-Rafea et al [30], probably because they did not measure patient HR when intraperitoneal pressure returned to 12 mmHg. Those authors did not establish parameters to evaluate possible changes in respiratory function and gas exchange.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
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“…The HR changes observed in the present study when intraperitoneal pressure returned to 12 mmHg in group P20 (TP3) were not reported by Abu-Rafea et al [30], probably because they did not measure patient HR when intraperitoneal pressure returned to 12 mmHg. Those authors did not establish parameters to evaluate possible changes in respiratory function and gas exchange.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 87%
“…The literature lacks studies investigating this issue. The only study we found did not establish parameters to evaluate changes in respiratory function and gas exchange [30]. In addition, the effect of each preset pressure level (10,15,20,25, and 30 mmHg) was evaluated at the exact moment it was reached, without taking into consideration the cumulative effect of duration of pneumoperitoneum at the different pressure levels to which the patients were submitted.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Only four bowel injuries (0.04%) and one major vessel injury (0.01%) were reported. Although the method leads to a significant decline in pulmonary compliance of about 20%, the maximum respiratory effects at 25 to 30 mmHg did not differ from the effect of the Trendelenburg position with intra-abdominal pressures of 15 mmHg [2,44,47,48].…”
Section: The Optical Veress Needlementioning
confidence: 74%
“…Prospective observational studies have shown that higher intraabdominal CO 2 insufflated pressures achieve greater anterior abdominal wall splinting and intraabdominal CO 2 gas bubble space [108,[153][154][155]. An IAP of 25 mmHg has been shown to achieve a maximum safe distance between the anterior abdominal wall and underlying abdominal contents without compromising cardiorespiratory function [156,157]. A two-handed, screwing manner-controlled vertical (90°) entry of only the primary trocar tip uses the safe CO 2 bubble depth afforded through an IAP of 25 mmHg and is highly unlikely to injure underlying vessels according to actual laparoscopy [113,146,147] and abdominal vasculature CT mapping studies [111,112,145].…”
Section: Controlled Vertical (90°) Veress Needle Entry (Steps 4 and 5)mentioning
confidence: 99%