Surgery for transverse colon cancer is very difficult because of small number of patients, variations in the vascular system, and complexity of the mobilize hepatic and splenic flexure of colon. We analyzed the clinical characteristics and surgical outcomes in 51 cases who underwent surgery for transverse colon cancer at our hospital between January 2014 and December 2021, and examined the optimal laparoscopic approach method. The surgical procedure was right hemicolectomy in 24 cases, transverse colectomy in 22 cases, and left hemicolectomy in 5 cases, of which 37 cases had laparoscopic surgery. In laparoscopic surgery, when comparing the cranial first approach group in 21 cases and the caudal approach group in 16 cases, the operative time was almost the same between the 2 groups. In the cranial first approach group the amount of bleeding tended to be small, the number of MCA lymph node dissections tended to be large and the hospital stay tended to be short, though there was no statistically significant difference. The results suggest that the cranial first approach tends to be safer and more accurate than the caudal approach.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

transverse colon
12
cranial approach
12
approach group
12
characteristics surgical
8
surgical outcomes
8
surgery transverse
8
colon cancer
8
small number
8
hemicolectomy cases
8
laparoscopic surgery
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!