AI Article Synopsis

  • Some methods help reduce bleeding during liver surgery, but using them in laparoscopic surgery might cause some liver damage.
  • This study looked at how a special technique called intermittent pedicle clamping (IPC) affects patients with healthy livers having minor laparoscopic liver surgery.
  • The results showed that there were no significant differences in liver health markers after surgery between patients who had IPC and those who didn't.

Article Abstract

While inflow occlusion techniques are accepted methods to reduce bleeding during open liver surgery, their use in laparoscopic liver resections are limited by possible effects of pneumoperitoneum on ischemia-reperfusion liver damage. This retrospective study was designed to investigate the impact of intermittent pedicle clamping (IPC) on patients with normal liver undergoing minor laparoscopic liver resections. Three matched groups of patients were retrospectively selected from our in-house database: 11 patients who underwent robot-assisted liver resection with IPC, and 16 and 11 patients who underwent robot-assisted liver resection without IPC and open liver resection with IPC, respectively. The primary end point was to assess differences in postoperative serum alanine, aspartate aminotransferase (ALT and AST) and bilirubin levels. The curves of serum AST, ALT and bilirubin levels in a span of time of five postoperative days were not significantly different between the three groups. IPC has no relevant effects on ischemia-reperfusion liver damage even in the presence of pneumoperitoneum.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13304-012-0144-5DOI Listing

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