Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions

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Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions George W. Holcomb, III, M.D., MBA Children’s Mercy Hospital Kansas City, MO

description

Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions. George W. Holcomb, III, M.D., MBA Children’s Mercy Hospital Kansas City, MO. Splenic Conditions. ITP Spherocytosis Splenic cysts Wandering spleen. J Pediatr Surg 28:689-692, 1993. Pre-Operative Preparation. Ultrasound - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions

Page 1: Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions

Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions

George W. Holcomb, III, M.D., MBAChildren’s Mercy Hospital

Kansas City, MO

Page 2: Laparoscopy for Splenic Conditions

Splenic Conditions

• ITP

• Spherocytosis

• Splenic cysts

• Wandering spleen

J Pediatr Surg 28:689-692, 1993J Pediatr Surg 28:689-692, 1993

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Pre-Operative Preparation• Ultrasound

• Often done by pediatrician, hematologist• Rarely needed for splenectomy, except may be useful for

extremely large spleen

• CT Scan – Useful in planning splenic cystectomy

• WinRho• Bone marrow stimulant• Usually used to platelet count• Useful pre-operatively to platelet count in ITP pt.

• Immunizations –Pneumococcus (Prevnar, Pneumovax)

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Patient Positioning

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Patient Positioning

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Personnel Positions

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Laparoscopic Splenectomy

• ITP, spherocytosis

• Port placement• (2) cannulas (5, 12)• (2) stab (3 mm) incisions

• Instruments• Harmonic scalpel (5 mm)• Articulating stapler (12 mm)

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Laparoscopic Splenectomy

Operative Steps• Divide spleno-colic

ligament, then short gastrics

• Clip artery• Autotransfuse pt• Protects stapler malfxn

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Laparoscopic Splenectomy

Operative Steps

• Divide spleno-renal lig.

• Articulating stapler across hilum

• Bag specimen, morcellate extracorporally

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Issues

• How large is too large?

• Measurement (LeClair)

• Earlier splenic artery ligation helpful

• Can divide spleen (spherocytosis) with harmonic, if necessary

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Issues

• Postoperative platelet ct. > 500,000

• Reports of splenic vein/portal vein thrombosis following splenectomy (open and laparoscopic)

• Baby aspirin ( 81 mg) QD for 6 mos

• Re-check at 3 months & 6 months

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Splenic Cysts

• Primary

• epithelial lining

• Pseudocysts (secondary)

• no epithelial lining

• often develop after trauma

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Splenic Cystectomy

• First step is decompression of cyst

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Splenic Cystectomy

• Excise cyst as close as possible to splenic parenchyma with harmonic scalpel

• Coagulate lining with Argon beam coagulator

• ? Place omentum adjacent to exposed cyst lining

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European Experience

• 3 European centers (Mainz, Mannheim, Hannover)

• 1995 - 2005

• 14 pts (median 8.5 yr)

• 10 recurrences (71%)

APSA 2006APSA 2006

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CMH Experience1990 - 2006

• 8 pts (6 – 18 yrs)

• 4 open, 4 laparoscopic

• ALOS: 2.75 days (open)1.75 days (laparoscopic)

• No recurrences ( 6 CT scans)

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Laparoscopic Cystectomy

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Wandering Spleen

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Wandering Spleen

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