Surgical Principles: Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS)
Methods
Laparoscopic
- 4-Degrees of Motion
- Up-Down
- Forward-Back
- Right-Left
- Grip
- 2-Dimensional View
Robotic
- 7-Degrees of Motion
- 4-Degrees of Laparoscopic (Up-Down, Forward-Back, Right-Left & Grip)
- Wrist Yaw
- Wrist Pitch
- Wrist Roll
- 3-Dimensional View
- Eliminates Hand Tremor
- Disadvantages: Longer Set Up & Higher Cost
- Best Indications: Foregut and Deep Pelvic Surgery
Trocar Placement
Access Techniques
- Veress Needle
- Closed Technique
- Spring Loaded Needle to Obtain Pneumoperitoneum for Primary Trocar
- Hasson Technique
- Open Cutdown & Direct Visualization for Primary Trocar
- No Difference in Complication Rate
Placement
- Avoid Previous Surgical Sites (Scarring and Adhesions)
- Macrobracing: Use Nondominant Hand to Brace, Prevents Bowel Injury
- Palmer’s Technique
- Palmer’s Point: 3 cm Below Left Subcostal Margin
- Access Point When Umbilical Adhesions are Present
- Avoid in Hepatosplenomegaly
- Pneumoperitoneum Flow Rate:
- Always Start with Low Flow
- Stretching Peritoneum Too Abruptly Can Cause Significant Vagal Response
- Initial Pressure < 8 mmHg with Low Flow (1 L/min) Indicates Peritoneal Entry
- Traditional Intraabdominal Pressure Goals: 12-15 mmHg
Pneumoperitoneum Physiologic Changes
Hemodynamics
- IVC Compression Causes Decrease Preload & Cardiac Output
- Increased Afterload/SVR
- Changes Offset (HR & MAP Unchanged)
- Can Tamponade Small Vessel Bleeding Which May Bleed when Released
Pulmonary
- Decreased Functional Residual Capacity (FRC) – May Manifest as Elevated Peak Airway Pressure
- CO2 Absorbed Causes Hypercarbia (Increased End Tidal CO2)
- Increased Abdominal Pressure Causes Increased Dead Space
- Decreased Lung Volumes (Vital Capacity, Tidal Volume & Total Volume)
Renal Effects
- Decreased Urine Output from Increased ADH
- BUN/Cr will Decrease in Immediate Postoperative Period
Contraindications
Laparoscopy Contraindications
- Unable to Tolerate Pneumoperitoneum (Advanced CHF, etc.)
- Massive Bowel Dilation
- Refractory Coagulopathy
- Trauma with Hemodynamic Instability
- Gross Contamination/Peritonitis
- Relative:
- Extensive Previous Abdominal Surgery with Multiple Incisional Scars
- Laparotomy within the Last 30 Days
- Morbid Obesity
- Cirrhosis with Portal Hypertension
Robotic Contraindications
- Same as Laparoscopic Surgery
- Multi-Quadrant Surgery
MIS Specific Complications
Causes of Excessive Pressure
- Cannula Tip Displacement
- Tubing Occlusion
- Stopcock Turned Off
- Light Sedation
Bowel Injury
- Incidence: 0.13%
- Risk Factors:
- Surgeon Inexperience
- Obesity
- Prior Abdominal Surgery
- Adhesions
- Sites:
- Small Bowel (56%) – Most Common
- Large Bowel (39%)
- Stomach (4%)
- Causes:
- Access Injury During Port Insertion (Veress Needle or Trocar)
- Most Common Cause
- Instrument Injury from Handling of Bowel
- Thermal Injury from Equipment Failure or Improper Use
- May Have Delayed Presentation
- Most Common Cause in Robotics: Poor Instrument Exchanges by Assistant
- Access Injury During Port Insertion (Veress Needle or Trocar)
- Techniques to Avoid:
- Avoid Previous Scars & Adhesions
- Consider Alternate Primary Trocar Site (Palmer’s Point)
- Macrobracing
- Avoid Blunt Dissection – Other Than for Mild Adhesions
- Avoid Monopolar Devices as Appropriate
- Avoid Previous Scars & Adhesions
- Tx: Repair (Laparoscopic or Convert to Open)
- < 50% Circumference: Primary Repair
- > 50% Circumference: Resection
Insufflation Vagal Response
- Sx: Bradycardia & Hypotension
- Tx: Desufflation
Capnothorax (Carbon Dioxide Pneumothorax)
- CO2 Traverses Diaphragm into Pleural Space
- Risk Factors:
- High Pressure
- Prolonged Surgery (> 200 Minutes)
- Tx: Desufflation
- Resolves Spontaneous within Minutes to Hours
- Chest Tube Not Needed
- Emergent Decompression if Causing Tension Pneumothorax
- Resolves Spontaneous within Minutes to Hours
CO2 Embolus
- Sx: Sudden Drop in ETCO2 & BP
- “Mill-Wheel” Murmur
- Tx:
- Desufflation
- Positioning (Trendelenburg & Left Lateral Decubitus)
- Aspirate Through CVC
Large Bleeding/Hemorrhage
- Convert to Open
MIS in Pregnancy
- Laparoscopy NOT Contraindicated in Pregnancy
- Risks by Trimester:
- First: Spontaneous Abortion
- Second: Safest
- Third: Premature Labor
- May Require Altered Port Placement Depending on Procedure