Laparoscopic Cholesectomy - University of Kentucky | Medical Center
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Transcript Laparoscopic Cholesectomy - University of Kentucky | Medical Center
LAPAROSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTOMY
CARA LAWRENCE
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
Symptoms
pain located URQ to upper
middle of the abdomen.
Pain occurs within minutes
of a meal
clay colored stools
Jaundice
(obstructive/conjugated)
Nausea
Vomiting
Mild fever
Work up
Blood tests:
Amylase and Lipase- digestive enzymes made by the
pancreas
Bilirubin- jaundice (typically measures both BC/BU)
CBC
Liver function
Abdominal Ultrasound Useful for detecting
gallstones and location
Abdominal CT scan
Abdominal X-ray
Oral cholecystogram -Eat high fat meal at noon, low fat
meal at night, take tablets and then NPO until the x-ray the
next day
Gallbladder radionuclide scan- 1-2 hr scan that takes
pictures to detect inflammation or gallstones
Abdominal Ultrasound Example
From St. Luke’s Health System Resource Library
Diagnosis
1
Acute/Chronic cholecystitis:
Cholelithiasis
-90% of cases & often obstruction of the
cystic duct, in chronic it is not understood if gall stones are
what first initiate symptoms
Rarely tumors: cholangiocarcinoma freq: 0.6/100,000
malignancy of the biliary tree
Biliary dyskinesia: (chronic acalculous
gallbladder disease)
Diagnosis
1
Cholelithiasis (gallstones)- 10-20% of the population
Pigment stones and Cholesterol stones
Women 2x more likely to have, aging also plays a role
Choledocholithiasis- if gallstone(s) located in the common
bile duct
From
Telepathology.com
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
Advantages
Contraindications2
Low mortality
Shorter hospital stay
Quicker recovery
Decreased cost
Gall Bladder or Bile duct
tumors
Portal Hypertension
Acute pancreatitis
Biliary fistula
Mirizzi’s Syndrome
Pregnancy in the final
trimester
Cardiopulmonary or
Coagulation disorders
Instrumentation
2 or 3 5mm trocars
1 or 2 10mm trocars
10mm 30° scope
liver retractor/
grasper(s)
straight dissectors
clip applier
Scalpel and Suture
Metzenbaum Scissors
L-hook electrocautery
5 mm/10mm,
irrigation & suction
Cholangiogram
depending on location
of stones
extraction bag
Structures to avoid
Duodenum and colon on trocar
placement
Common bile duct (2-7% chance of injury)
Common Hepatic Duct (can be mistaken
for cystic artery in anatomical variations)
Liver and other instruments with L-Hook
Also note any variations such as an
accessory hepatic ducts
Anatomy in the Operating Room
Falciform Ligament
Fundus of Gallbladder
Infindibulum of Gall bladder
Calot’s Triangle
Cystic
Duct (connecting from Common Bile Duct)
Common Hepatic Duct
Liver
Cystic Artery (often arises from the right hepatic artery,
but note that there are variations
Calot’s (Lund’s) Node
Operating Room Setup
Placed in a reverse
Trendelenburg and
tilted slightly to the
left after insertion
of optic trocar
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
Prep the patient
Placement of first trocar (midline navel)
Creation of Pneumoperitinium
Final Diagnosis (2 min 47 sec)
Place patient in Reverse Trendelenburg position
slightly rotated to the left
Apply local anesthetics and 2-3 other trocars
under visualization of scope (4 min 50 sec)
Trocar placement
Surgical Trocar (both
are often 5mm)
Optical
Trocar
Retraction of
gall
bladder/live
r
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
Assistant grasps fundus of gallbladder and
retract superiorly
Grasp infundibulum of the gallbladder (may
need some dissecting)
Create tension by pulling slightly superior and
laterally on the infundibulum of the gall
bladder
Dissect Calot’s Triangle starting towards the
infundibulum of the gall bladder and working
your way to the common bile duct (12 min 51 sec)
Infundibulum
of Gall Bladder
Cystic Artery
Cystic Duct
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
Using the
gallbladder as
point of reference,
place 2 distal clips
and 1 proximal clip
along the cystic
duct. (30 min 3 sec)
Divide making sure
both jaws are
visible to prevent
vascular injury
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
Using the gallbladder
as point of reference,
place 2 distal clips
and 1 proximal clip
along the cystic
artery. (39 min 21 sec)
Divide and
cauterize/clip any
necessary collateral
arteries
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
(45 min 9 sec)
Dissect away
the posterior
wall of the gall
bladder using
an L-Hook.
Make sure Lhook does not
come in contact
with other
instrumentation
to prevent
tissue damage
Retrograde Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Steps
Remove gallbladder via bag or trocar
Irrigate and Suction
Final visualization check
Deroofing of ovarian cyst (55 min 28 sec)
Irrigate and suction
Release of CO and steri-strip or suture
2
trocar incisions
Post-operative care
Transfer to PACU
Discharge typically within 24 hours
Post-operative pain can typically be relieved with
OTC pain medications
Patient can resume normal daily activities in roughly
24 hours
Heavy lifting should be avoided for a few weeks
Watch for drainage, bleeding, swelling around
incision sites, and for mild fever, as this could
indicate complication
References
1. Kumar , V., Abbas, A., & Fausto, N. (7th Ed.). (2005). Robbins and
Cotran: Pathologic basis of disease. Philidelphia, PA: Elsevier
Saunders.
2. Kremer, K., Platzer, W., Schreiber, H., Steichen, F.M. (2001).
Minimally Invasive Abdominal Surgery. New York, NY: Theime.
3. Berci, G., Nobuto, T., Phillips, E.H. (2008). A pocket atlas of
laparoscopic surgery. Tuttlingen, Germany: Endo:Press.
4. Longstreth, G.F. (2009, July 6). Acute cholecystitis. Retrieved from
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000264.htm
5. Swierzerski, III, S.J. (2001, November 1). Cholecystectomy:
preoperative procedures, postoperative procedures, complications.
Retrieved from
http://www.surgerychannel.com/cholecystectomy/preop.shtml