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The following section
describes the HandPort’s use in assistance of laparoscopic
subtotal and total gastrectomy with reconstruction. Gastrectomy
cases serve as an excellent model to demonstrate the potential
benefits of hand-assistance to advanced laparoscopic surgery.
Since an extraction incision is often necessary in gastrectomy
and other advanced cases, we simply make use of this incision
from the beginning through a properly selected site. Making use
of the operator’s hand from the start allows continued
efficient retraction, blunt dissection, and tactile feedback
throughout the case. We have had considerable total laparoscopic
gastrectomy experience and believe this device will allow us to
perform laparoscopic gastrectomy more safely and efficiently.
Our bias is that the well-known benefits to the patient from the
laparoscopic approach (less pain, quicker recovery) will, for
the most part, be retained.
Patient Selection
Standard indications for
gastrectomy are utilized. The laparoscopic approach may be used
to treat both benign and malignant diseases of the stomach. In
view of the current debate over laparoscopic surgery in cases of
known malignancy, and, in particular, port site recurrence,
caution must be exercised in patients with potentially curative
resections. However, most examples of port site recurrence are
likely the result of advanced disease or poor technique. We can
not overemphasize enough the need to adhere to the strict
surgical principles in which we individually believe. The
laparoscopic equivalent should not be a compromise or short-cut
procedure.
Contraindications to this
approach remain as those encountered for most complex
laparoscopic surgery, specifically, poor cardiopulmonary
reserve. This is due to the decrease in venous return and
increase in pulmonary resistance associated with the
pneumoperitoneum. A relative contraindication may include
non-elective gastric resection.
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