Laparoscopic-Assisted Transvaginal Cholecystectomy - the US Military Experience With Long-Term Follow Up.

JSLS

Department of General Surgery, Naval Medical Readiness and Training Command, San Diego, California, USA. (Drs Judge, Bandle, Gadbois, and Wisbach).

Published: April 2024

Objectives: We present our initial clinical experience applying Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgical (NOTES) technique to perform cholecystectomy in ten patients at a military institution.

Methods: A posterior colpotomy was created to accommodate a single site working port used to facilitate dissection and gallbladder mobilization under direct visualization via an infraumbilical port. The specimen was retrieved through the vagina and the colpotomy was closed with absorbable suture under direct visualization. Long-term follow up was performed over the phone to assess quality of life with 2 widely used health-related quality of life (HRQoL) surveys including RAND-36 Health Item Survey (Version 1.0), and the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI)..

Results: Ten women underwent a laparoscopic-assisted transvaginal cholecystectomy (TVC) with 7 available for long-term follow-up. The average age was 28.9 years (20-37) and the indications for surgery included symptomatic cholelithiasis (9) and biliary dyskinesia (1). The mean operative time was 129 mins (95-180), and median blood loss was 34 ml (5-400). There were no conversions and the average length of stay was 9.98 hours (2.4-28.8). Pain (analogue scale 1-10) on postoperative day three was minimal (mean 2.3) and was limited to the infraumbilical incision. On average patients returned to work by postoperative day six and resumed normal daily activities at seven days. Immediate postoperative complications included one incident of postoperative urinary retention requiring bladder catheterization. One intra-operative cholangiogram was successfully performed due to elevated preoperative liver enzymes without significant findings. Long-term complications included one asymptomatic incisional hernia repair at the infraumbilical port site. The RAND-36 survey demonstrated an average physical and mental health summary score of 82.2 and 63.7 with an average general health score of 63.6. The average FSFI total score was 21.8.

Conclusion: TVC is safe and effective. Implementation may improve operational readiness by returning service members to normal activities more expeditiously than conventional laparoscopy.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10984372PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4293/JSLS.2023.00059DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

laparoscopic-assisted transvaginal
8
transvaginal cholecystectomy
8
long-term follow
8
direct visualization
8
infraumbilical port
8
quality life
8
postoperative day
8
complications included
8
average
6
cholecystectomy military
4

Similar Publications

Background: Natural orifice specimen extraction surgery (NOSES) has emerged as a promising alternative compared to conventional laparoscopic-assisted total gastrectomy (LATG) for treating gastric cancer (GC). However, evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of NOSES for GC surgery is limited. This study aimed to compare the safety and feasibility, in addition to postoperative complications of NOSES and LATG.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are mesenchymal tumors that arise in the muscular or submucosal layers of the gastrointestinal tract. Extra-gastrointestinal stromal tumors (EGISTs) are rare primary entities that develop outside the digestive tract which are histologically and immunologically similar to GISTs. We present the case of a 52-year-old female diagnosed with a primary EGIST arising in the small bowel mesentery four months after undergoing hormone therapy for multiple uterine myomas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Laparoscopic-Assisted Transvaginal Cholecystectomy - the US Military Experience With Long-Term Follow Up.

JSLS

April 2024

Department of General Surgery, Naval Medical Readiness and Training Command, San Diego, California, USA. (Drs Judge, Bandle, Gadbois, and Wisbach).

Objectives: We present our initial clinical experience applying Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgical (NOTES) technique to perform cholecystectomy in ten patients at a military institution.

Methods: A posterior colpotomy was created to accommodate a single site working port used to facilitate dissection and gallbladder mobilization under direct visualization via an infraumbilical port. The specimen was retrieved through the vagina and the colpotomy was closed with absorbable suture under direct visualization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Conventional laparoscopic-assisted right hemicolectomy involves a small abdominal incision that can lead to postoperative complications and affect patient recovery.
  • Transvaginal natural orifice specimen extraction surgery (NOSES VIIIA) offers a solution by extracting the specimen through the vagina, avoiding the small incision.
  • A phase III study (NCT05495048) will compare NOSES VIIIA and the small-incision method in 352 female patients, focusing on 3-year disease-free survival to evaluate oncological effectiveness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Laparoscopic-assisted vaginal radical hysterectomy (LARVH) and abdominal radical hysterectomy (ARH) have been widely applied to treat cervical carcinoma. But LARVH and ARH have not been fully investigated in treating cervical carcinoma after injury associated with injury. This research is intended to provide an up-to-date basis for comparing LARVH with ARH in early stage cervical carcinoma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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!