We developed an umbilical zigzag skin incision technique to perform abdominal laparoscopic operations using a GelPort, with a minimal number of skin incisions. We consider that our method reduces the technical difficulties associated with laparoscopic surgery and maintains cosmesis.
A retrospective study was conducted on 409 patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy at Teikyo University Hospital between May, 1990 and October, 1992. The operation had to be converted to an open cholecystectomy in ten of these patients because of uncontrollable bleeding from the cystic artery in one, venous bleeding due to portal hypertension in one, extensive adhesions of the omentum and the duodenum to the gallbladder in two, extensive adhesions around the gallbladder in four, and extensive adhesions between the gallbladder and the common bile duct (CBD) in two. The time taken to complete the procedure ranged from 30 to 235 min, the average time being 81 min, and the postoperative hospital stay ranged from 3 to 56 days, the average stay being 6.5 days. Eleven patients developed complications intra- or postoperatively: bile duct injury which became manifest after the operation and required laparotomy in three patients; injury to the right hemidiaphragm resulting in a right pneumothorax in one; periumbilical subcutaneous emphysema in one; mild bile leaks which resolved in a few days in two; and a severe bile leak which resolved after 6 days in one. The indications for laparoscopic cholecystectomy have widened with experience and now, CBD stones and a history of previous gastrectomy are no longer contraindications for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Thus, it seems that laparoscopic cholecystectomy can be performed as safely as a standard cholecystectomy, provided the patients are selected properly and appropriate caution is exercised.
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