Single-port laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair with modified sugarbaker technique

Laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair with modified Sugarbaker technique has become increasingly the operation of choice because of its low recurrence rates. This study aimed to assess feasibility, safety, and efficiency of performing the same operation with single-incision laparoscopic surgery. All...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons 2014-01, Vol.18 (1), p.34-40
Hauptverfasser: Tran, Hanh, Turingan, Isidro, Zajkowska, Marta, Tran, Kim
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container_title Journal of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons
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creator Tran, Hanh
Turingan, Isidro
Zajkowska, Marta
Tran, Kim
description Laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair with modified Sugarbaker technique has become increasingly the operation of choice because of its low recurrence rates. This study aimed to assess feasibility, safety, and efficiency of performing the same operation with single-incision laparoscopic surgery. All patients referred from March 2010 to February 2013 were considered for single-port laparoscopic repair with modified Sugarbaker technique. A SILS port (Covidien, Norwalk, Connecticut, USA) was used together with conventional straight dissecting instruments and a 5.5- mm/52-cm/30° laparoscope. Important technical aspects include modified dissection techniques, namely, "inline" and "chopsticks" to overcome loss of triangulation, insertion of a urinary catheter into an ostomy for ostomy limb identification, safe adhesiolysis by avoiding electocautery, saline -jet dissection to demarcate tissue planes, dissection of an entire laparotomy scar to expose incidental incisional hernias, adequate mobilization of an ostomy limb for lateralization, and wide overlapping of defect with antiadhesive mesh. Of 6 patients, 5 underwent single-port laparoscopic repair, and 1 (whose body mass index [BMI] of 39.4 kg/m(2) did not permit SILS port placement) underwent multiport repair. Mean defect size was 10 cm, and mean mesh size was 660 cm(2) with 4 patients having incidental incisional hernias repaired by the same mesh. Mean operation time was 270 minutes, and mean hospital stay was 4 days. Appliance malfunction ceased immediately, and pain associated with parastomal hernia disappeared. There was no recurrence with a follow-up of 2 to 36 months. Compared with multiport repair, single-port laparoscopic parastomal repair with modified Sugarbaker technique is safe and efficient, and it may eventually become the standard of care.
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Enterostomy - adverse effects
Equipment Design
Feasibility Studies
Follow-Up Studies
Hernia, Ventral - etiology
Hernia, Ventral - surgery
Herniorrhaphy - methods
Humans
Laparoscopes
Laparoscopy
Postoperative Complications
Reoperation
Retrospective Studies
Scientific Papers
Surgical Mesh
Suture Techniques
title Single-port laparoscopic parastomal hernia repair with modified sugarbaker technique
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