Three-dimensional endorectal sonography with a specially developed system is able to produce an image of the entire pelvic floor including the sphincter muscles and the rectal wall even in small children. This special system is based on conventional endorectal ultrasound and allows recording of a controlled withdrawal of the axially rotating transducer, creating an image sequence resembling that of a spiral CT-scan; this sequence is digitized off-line and evaluated in a three-dimensional form by a workstation computer. This evaluation has several advantages compared with conventional examination, for example, the complete recording of organs with the possibility of volumetry, construction of arbitrary sections, volume-rendering procedures and the interactive segmentation of organ borders and their three-dimensional visualization. Based on images from this 3D endorectal sonography, the normal anatomy of the pelvic floor that is visible using ultrasound is described, followed by some pathological findings concerning continence surgery. Finally we discuss the advantages and restrictions compared to other examination procedures and the possibilities of technical development.
There are only few pediatric surgical centers across the world with expertise for minimally invasive anatomical lung resections in children. Between September 2003 and September 2005, 67 children underwent thoracoscopic surgery at the Department of Pediatric Surgery, University Hospital of Tuebingen, Germany. In 19 of these cases a lung resection was carried out, 8 of them had an anatomical lung resection. All patients underwent general anesthesia without selective intubation for the procedure. Intrathoracic pressure with insufflation of carbon dioxide of 1.5 l / min was held at 3-5 mmHg. Two 5 mm ports for video and instruments and one 12 mm port for a stapling device were used. Resected lung specimens were removed from the thorax through an additional 2-3 cm long incision. A bronchoscopy was carried out during surgery in all patients. Median age at operation was 5.6 years (range 3 months-20 years). Median operation time was 150 minutes (range 94-250 min). Conversion to open surgery was performed in 3 cases. This was due to bleeding in one child, due to a stiff lung in another patient with cystic fibrosis and due to a vascular and bronchial malformation in a third child suffering from middle lobe syndrome. There were no postoperative complications. Our preliminary results show, that thoracoscopic lung resections in children can be performed without major complications and excellent cosmetic results. For the necessity of a conversion to open surgery possible reasons may be insufficient intrathoracic overview as well as congenital anomalies of the vascular and / or the bronchial tract. Co-morbidities such as rib-fusion, deformities of the thorax or scoliosis can be avoided using thoracoscopic procedures.
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