J Korean Surg Soc.  2001 Aug;61(2):211-215.

Hand-assisted Laparoscopic Total Gastrectomy

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Korea. ywkimmed@mm.ewha.ac.kr

Abstract

Although the standard treatment of gastric cancer is still radical subtotal or total gatrectomy, minimal invasive surgery is a primary issue in early gastric cancer, because quality of life is very important if the disease is curable. Laparoscopic total gastrectomy has not yet met widspread acceptance owing to the technical difficulties and has not been reported in Korea. The authors used the Handport system(TM), which enables introducing one of the surgeon's hands into the abdominal cavity while maintaining pneumoperitoneum. The patient was a 38-year old man. His chief complaint was hematemesis. Emergency esophagogatroscopy revealed cardiac ulcer with active bleeding. Sclerotherapy was successfully done and the patient was stabilized. Follow-up gastroscopic examination and biopsy demonstrated moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma in the ulcer area. The surgery was done electively. The operator's left hand was inserted into the abdomen through the right upper quadrant via the Handport system. An additional 10 mm working port was made in the left upper quadrant. Laparoscopy was inserted through the umbilical port. An Ultrashear(R) was used for dissection of omentum and perigastric vessels. D1 plus alpha lymph node dissection was performed completely. Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy was done for reconstruction through the Handport site. Opeation time was 6 hours and blood loss was 500 ml. No transfusion was required. The patient recovered uneventfully and was discharged at 16 postoperative days. In terms of recovery and quality of life laparoscopic total gastrectomy is a technically feasible and reasonable option for the treatment of early gastric cancer.

Keyword

Stomach cancer; Total gastrectomy; Hand-assisted laparoscopy

MeSH Terms

Abdomen
Abdominal Cavity
Adenocarcinoma
Adult
Biopsy
Emergencies
Follow-Up Studies
Gastrectomy*
Hand
Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy
Hematemesis
Hemorrhage
Humans
Korea
Laparoscopy
Lymph Node Excision
Omentum
Pneumoperitoneum
Quality of Life
Sclerotherapy
Stomach Neoplasms
Ulcer
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