Surgical endoscopy
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Multicenter Study
Surgical site infection after laparoscopic and open appendectomy: a multicenter large consecutive cohort study.
Laparoscopic appendectomy (LA) has been rapidly applied worldwide recently. The issue of surgical site infection (SSI) after appendectomy needs to be re-investigated and analyzed along with this trend. This study aimed to identify risk factors of SSI after appendectomy in recent years. ⋯ With the increasing application trends of laparoscopic procedure, the incidence of SSI after appendectomy declined accordingly. Compared with OA, LA was independently associated with a significantly lower incidence of incisional SSI, but a similar incidence of organ/space SSI.
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Multicenter Study
Hospital admissions greater than 30 days following bariatric surgery: patient and procedure matter.
Assessment of hospital admission in the 30-day period following bariatric surgery likely underestimates true hospital utilization. The purpose of this study is to assess hospital admissions for 2 years following bariatric surgery to identify potential differences by patient and procedure. ⋯ One out of four bariatric patients will be admitted to the hospital within 2 years of surgery. While most patients are admitted only once, a subset of patients requiring numerous hospital admissions was identified. LSG is associated with both the highest rate as well as highest frequency of hospital admissions. Several patient factors were also identified that significantly increased admission risk. Consideration and attention to these factors are necessary for operative planning, preoperative patient education, and postoperative monitoring.
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Growing evidence suggests that the intracorporeal fashioning of an anastomosis after a laparoscopic right colectomy may offer several advantages. However, due to the difficulty of the intracorporeal technique, laparoscopic extracorporeal confectioning of the anastomosis remains the most widely adopted technique. Although the purpose of the robotic approach was to overcome the limitations of the laparoscopic technique and to simplify the most demanding surgical procedures, such as performing an intracorporeal anastomosis, evidence is lacking that compares the robotic right colectomy with intracorporeal anastomosis (RRCIA) technique with both the conventional laparoscopic right colectomy with extracorporeal anastomosis (LRCEA) and the laparoscopic right colectomy with intracorporeal anastomosis confectioning (LRCIA) techniques. This study aims to compare the intraoperative and postoperative outcomes of the RRCIA to those of both the LRCEA and the LRCIA. ⋯ Performing the RRCIA offers significantly better perioperative recovery outcomes compared with the LRCEA, with a substantial reduction in the length of the hospital stay. The RRCIA does not offer the same advantages compared with the LRCIA.
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Multicenter Study
A population-based analysis of emergent versus elective paraesophageal hernia repair using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample.
As the life expectancy in the United States continues to increase, more elderly, sometimes frail patients present with sub-acute surgical conditions such as a symptomatic paraesophageal hernia (PEH). While the outcomes of PEH repair have improved largely due to the proliferation of laparoscopic surgery, there is still a defined rate of morbidity and mortality. We sought to characterize the outcomes of both elective and emergent PEH repair using a large population-based data set. ⋯ Patients undergoing emergent PEH repair in the United States tend to be older, more likely a racial minority, and less likely to undergo laparoscopic repair. Elective repair, younger age, and a laparoscopic approach are associated with improved outcomes. Considering all of the above, we recommend that patients consider elective repair with a surgeon experienced in the laparoscopic approach, especially when symptoms related to the hernia are present.
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Minimally invasive colorectal resection is associated with significantly elevated levels of plasma matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP-3) during the first month after surgery which may promote the growth of residual metastases.
MMP-3, a member of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family, is involved in the breakdown of the extracellular matrix in tissue remodeling and may also play a role in cancer progression and metastasis. Minimally invasive colorectal resection (MICR) may increase plasma MMP-3 levels directly via surgical trauma or indirectly due to surgery-associated elevations in TNF-α and IL1 which are regulators of MMP-3. This study's purpose was to evaluate plasma MMP-3 levels during the first month after MICR for colorectal cancer. ⋯ Plasma MMP-3 levels remained significantly elevated from baseline for 4 weeks after MICR for CRC. The early postoperative increase in MMP-3 levels may be due to the surgery-related acute inflammatory response; the elevation noted during weeks 2-3 may be related to wound healing. Increased MMP-3 levels may promote metastases or the growth of residual cancer.