ObjectiveTo investigate the efficacy and safety of laparoscopic surgery for overweight/obese patients with acute perforated or gangrenous appendicitis. MethodsFrom January 2007 to December 2014, patients with acute perforated or gangrenous appendicitis underwent laparoscopic (152 cases) or open (60 cases) appendectomy were collected, who were retrospectively classified into overweight/obese group (BMI≥25 kg/m2, n=69) or normal weight group (BMI < 25 kg/m2, n=143). Conversion rate, operation time, hospital stay, readmission, reoperation, and postoperative complications such as incision infection, abdominal abscess, and lung infection were analyzed. Results①The rate of conversion to open surgery had no significant difference between the overweight/obese group and the normal weight group[4.2% (2/48) versus 6.7% (7/104), χ2=0.06, P > 0.05].②The operation time of laparoscopic surgery in the overweight/obese group was significantly shorter than that of the open surgery in the overweight/obese group[(41.6±11.7) min versus (63.1±23.3) min, P < 0.01], which had no significant difference between the laparoscopic surgery in the overweight/obese group and laparoscopic surgery in the normal weight group[(41.6±11.7) min versus (39.6±12.7) min, P > 0.05].③The total complications rate and incision infection rate of the laparoscopic surgery in the overweight/obese group were significantly lower than those of the open surgery in the overweight/obese group[total complications rate:16.7% (8/48) versus 52.4% (11/21), χ2=9.34, P < 0.01; incision infection rate:4.2% (2/48) versus 33.3% (7/21), χ2=8.54, P < 0.01]. Although the total complications rate of all the patients in the overweight/obese group was increased as compared with all the patients in the normal weight group[27.5% (19/69) versus 14.7% (21/143), χ2=5.02, P < 0.01], but which had no significant difference between the laparoscopic surgery in the overweight/obese group and laparoscopic surgery in the normal weight group[16.7% (8/48) versus 12.5% (13/104), χ2=0.45, P > 0.05].④The reoperation rate of all the patients performed laparoscopic surgery was significantly lower than that of all the patients performed open operation[1.3% (2/152) versus 10.0% (6/60), χ2=6.7, P < 0.01].⑤The abdominal abscess rate, lung infection rate, and hospital stay after discharge had no significant differences among all the patients (P > 0.05). ConclusionLaparoscopic appendectomy could be considered a safe technique for overweight/obese patients with acute perforated or gangrenous appendicitis, which could not increase the difficulty of laparoscopic surgery and the perioperative risk.
The article reports 300 cases of laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed in Chengdu General Hospital of P.L.A. from October 1992 to August 1993. 16 of 300 were converted to open procedure. The number of postoperative complication cases was 12(4%).
ObjectiveTo explore the learning process, critical steps and complication prevention of heterotopic abdominal heart transplantation (HAHT) model in rats,and effectively improve the learning process and shorten the learning curve. MethodsSurgical experience of 146 rats of HAHT from October 2012 to January 2013 was summarized. Operation time,successful rate and failure reasons were analyzed. ResultsA training time of 140-150 hours was needed to successfully master surgical skills of HAHT in rats. Average operation time was 83±27 minutes. There were 105 successful HAHT rats (72%) and 41 failed HAHT rats(28%) among 146 HAHT rats. Major failure reasons included hemorrhagic shock (16 rats,39%) grafted heart rebeating failure (7 rats,17%) and anastomotic stenosis (7 rats,17%). ConclusionVascular anastomosis is the key procedure for the establishment of HAHT model in rats.