Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDavid Pierce Modified over 9 years ago
1
Complications in Laparoscopic Urology Dr. Anmar Nassir, FRCS(C) Fellowship in Andrology (U of Ottawa) Fellowship in EndoUrology and Laparoscopy (McMaster Univ) Chairman, Department of Surgery Umm Al-Qura Univ Consultant Urology, King Faisal Specialist Hospital, Jeddah
2
Major Complications of Transperitoneal Abdominal Laparoscopic Surgery Urology 2004; J Urol 2002 894 Abdominal Total Procedures 13.2%Overall complications 5.7% 7.5% Intraoperative/ postoperative 0.2%Deaths 2.8%Vascular injury 1.1%Bowel injury 1.1%Adjacent organ injury 1.7%Conversion rate
3
Procedural Complications Complications Related to Obtaining the Pneumoperitoneum Placement of Secondary Trocars GA Unique to Laparoscopy Exiting the Abdomen Complications in the Early Postoperative Period Late Postoperative Complications
4
Complications of Obtaining the Pneumoperitoneum Malfunction of Equipment Closed Access (Veress Needle Placement) Insufflation and Pneumoperitoneum Open Access (Hasson Technique) "Blind" Placement of the First Trocar after Veress Needle
5
Complications Associated with Closed Access (Veress Needle Placement) Preperitoneal Placement Vascular Injuries Visceral Injuries
6
Complications Related to Insufflation and Pneumoperitoneum Bowel Insufflation Gas Embolism Barotrauma Subcutaneous Emphysema Pneumomediastinum, Pneumothorax, and Pneumopericardium
7
Complications Related to Initial "Blind" Placement of the First Trocar Injury to GI Organs Injury to the Urinary Tract Injury to Intra-abdominal Vessels
9
Contents of Hemorrhage Tray for Laparoscopic Surgery Laparoscopic Satinsky clamp 10-millimeter suction/irrigation tip Endostitch device with 4-0 absorbable suture LapraTy clip applier and clips 4-0 vascular suture on an SH needle with a LapraTy clip preplaced on the end Two laparoscopic needle drivers Topical hemostatic agent of choice
11
Complications Related to Placement of Secondary Trocars Bleeding at the Cannula Site
13
Position-Related Problems
14
Complications Related to GA Unique to Laparoscopy Cardiac Arrhythmias and Cardiac Arrest Changes in Blood Pressure Aspiration of Gastric Contents Hypothermia
15
Complications Related to the Surgical Procedure Bowel Injury: Electrosurgical Mechanical Vascular Injury Pancreatic Injury Splenic Injury Injury to the Urinary Tract Bladder Injury Ureteral Injury Injury to Nerves
16
Injury to Nerves 45/1650 = 2.7%. These include abdominal wall neuralgia (14) extremity sensory deficit (12) extremity motor deficit (8) clinical rhabdomyolysis (6) shoulder contusion (4) back spasm (2) Wolf et al, Urology 2000
17
Complications Related to Exiting the Abdomen Bowel Entrapment Bleeding at the Sheath Site
18
Complications in the Early Postoperative Acute Hydrocele Scrotal and Abdominal Ecchymosis Pain Incisional Hernia Deep Venous Thrombosis Wound Infections Rhabdomyolysis
19
Late Postoperative Complications Lymphocele Formation Chylous Ascites
20
Ergonomics 8-22 of Lap. Surgeons reported pain, numbness, stiffness and eye strain (Hemal, 2002) It is due to; Posture Visualization Manipulation Monitor should be at the head level or 10-20 degrees lower Use step stool to work comfortably
21
Pt w severe COPD further studies (i.e., ABG and PFT) are required. In severe COPD, helium as an alternate. Significant cardiac arrhythmias evaluated treated hypercarbia and the resulting acidosis may have adverse effects on the myocardium. Before starting select your patient
22
Absolute contraindications Uncorrectable coagulopathy Intestinal obstruction Abdominal wall infection Massive hemoperitoneum/hemoretroperitoneum Generalized peritonitis Retroperitoneal abscess Suspected malignant ascites
23
Relative contraindications BMI, according to the WHO Overweight = 25 to 29.9 kg/m 2 Obese = 30 to 34.9kg/m 2 30 to 34.9 kg/m 2 Morbid obesity= > 35 kg/m 2 > 35 kg/m 2
24
Relative contraindications (if …) Morbid Obesity Extensive Prior Abdominal or Pelvic Surgery Organomegaly Ascites: Benign Etiology Pregnancy Hernia Iliac or Aortic Aneurysm
28
Relative contraindications (if …) Morbid Obesity Extensive Prior Abdominal Organomegaly Ascites: Benign Etiology Pregnancy Hernia Iliac or Aortic Aneurysm
29
Creating a pneumoperitoneum There are 4 basic techniques used 1. Veress needle 2. direct trocar insertion 3. optical trocar insertion 4. open laparoscopy Gu¨nenc et al. Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech, 2005
30
Sites for verse needle Upper quadrant access 622 consecutive cases. Prior abdominal surgery in 31% body mass index was 30 or greater in 98 patients. 92% successful placement 5% minor liver laceration, managed conservatively 3% the omentum or falciform ligament was traversed without significant injury. No major complications, such as vascular or hollow-organ perforation, were caused by either the Veress needle or trocar. No patient developed an incisional hernia at the upper quadrant trocar site Chung et al, Urology 2003
31
Direct trocar insertion In 578 laparoscopic procedures: 1. blind insertion of the Veress needle (group 1, n = 301) 2. direct trocar insertion with elevation of the rectus sheath using 2 towel clips (group 2, n = 277). Gu¨nenc et al. Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech, 2005
32
Results: Total complication rates: gr 1 = 15.7% (n = 33) gr 2 = 3.3% (n = 4) (P < 0.05) Conclusion: Direct trocar insertion with elevation of the rectus sheath using 2 towel clips is an easy, safe, and effective technique. Gu¨nenc et al. Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech, 2005
33
Ralph V. Clayman, J of urol. Pg 1847. Nov, 2005 Having been a Veress needle advocate throughout my career, I am loath to change. However, this scientifically well-done study gives me “pause”; quicker pneumoperitoneum with fewer complications is certainly a compelling argument for considering a change.
34
Physiological changes to pneumoperitoneum
35
Pressure Effects : 5, 10, 20, and 40 mm Hg 40 mm Hg20 mm Hg10 mm Hg5 mm HgEffects Cardiovascular ↓↑↑↑Heart rate ↑↑↑↑Mean arterial pressure ↑↑↑↑Systemic vascular resistance ↓↓↑ →/↓Venous return ↓→/↓→/↑→/↓Cardiac output Renal ↓↓ ↓→Glomerular filtration rate ↓↓ ↓→Urine output Respiratory ↑→/↑ →End-tidal CO 2 ↑↑↑→PCO 2 ↓↓→/↓→Arterial pH
36
Few words about HAL
37
Hand-port incisional hernias 50 laparoscopic hand-assisted radical nephrectomies. Closed with #1 polydioxanone sulfate suture in a running fashion. Three (6%) patients developed hernia. All in midline hand-port sites. The average body weight of those who developed an incisional hernia was 137 kg. JSLS, 9: 196–198, 2005
38
Hand-port incisional hernias Risk Factors obesity earlier return to activity Conclusion: nonabsorbable suture + interrupted closure limited activity 4-6 wks post op if high risks. No further wound hernias since adopting these changes JSLS, 9: 196–198, 2005 Clayman. J of Urol, Dec 2005
39
WOUND COMPLICATIONS AFTER HALS MONTGOMERY, et al. J of Uro, Dec 2005
40
WOUND COMPLICATIONS AFTER HALS MONTGOMERY, et al. J of Uro, Dec 2005
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.