Gallbladder Damage Control: Compromised Procedure for Compromised Patients
Justin Lee, MD, Reza Kermani, MD, Haisar Dao, MD, Kevin F O'donnell, MD. St. Elizabeth Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine IntroductionAs experience of open cholecystectomy has decreased significantly in the past two decades both in surgical practice and training, open cholecystectomy is generally performed for severe inflammation necessitating conversion to an open… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Podium Presentations
- Topic:
- HPB
Gasless Transaxillary Robotic vs Endoscopic Thyroidectomy: Exploring the Frontiers of Scarless Thyroidectomy Through a Preliminary Comparison Study
Andreas Kiriakopoulos, MD, Dimitrios Linos, MD. Department of Surgery, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece Aim: Robotic – assisted thyroidectomy has been inadvertently associated with lengthy operative times mainly due to fussy robot preparation and docking maneuvers. We propose a purely endoscopic approach using a novel platform comparing its results with the former approach Patients and… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Podium Presentations
- Topic:
- Solid Organ and Endocrine
Gastrectomy and Hepatectomy By Multi Piercing Surgery Using 3-mm Diameter Electronic Control Forceps
INTRODUCTION: It is described in medical documents that Needlescopic Surgery by use of 3-mm diameter forceps is a minimally invasive surgery method which does not damage somatic pain nerves on the body surface. However, when we deal with bigger organs to be operated such as in gastrectomy or hepatectomy, we are faced with the problem… Continue Reading
Gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y Esophagojejunostomy for Gastric Necrosis After Gastric Band Slippage
Jason F Richardson, MD, Ninh T Nguyen, MD. University of California Irvine Medical Center A video demonstration of a gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy performed in a patient who developed gastric necrosis after gastric band slippage. Radiologic review, endoscopic evaluation, gastric band removal, gastric resection, and reconstruction are featured in this video. Session Number: SS08… Continue Reading
- Topic:
- Metabolic / Obesity
Gastric Electrical Stimulation With Enterra for Drug-resistant Gastroparesis
Nv G Jayanthi, MD FRCS, Sp L Dexter, MD FRCS, Ai Sarela, MD FRCS. Department of Upper Gastrointestinal, Metabolic & Bariatric Surgery, St James’s University Hospital, Leeds, UK Introduction: Drug-resistant gastroparesis is a debilitating condition. Several clinical studies have demonstrated that most, but not all, patients get significant relief from vomiting by gastric electrical… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Podium Presentations
- Topic:
- Foregut
Gastric Ischemic Conditioning Increases Neovascularization and Reduces Inflammation and Fibrosis During Gastroesophageal Anastomotic Healing
Kyle A Perry, MD, James Liu, MD, Ambar Banarjee, MD, Mark R Wendling, Nilay Shah, MD, W S Melvin, MD. Center for Minimally Invasive Surgery, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH INTRODUCTION: Gastric pull-up reconstruction is the most common approach to esophageal replacement during esophagectomy. The incidence of anastomotic leak and stricture remain high,… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Podium Presentations
- Topic:
- Basic Science
Gastroduodenal Intussusception-A Rare Interesting Case Report.
Choden Norbu, MS, J S Basunia, MS, K Khan, MD, D Bagchi, MS, N Pandit, MD, A N Sarkar, MS, Jamyang Gyatsho, MS. North Bengal Medical Colleg& Hospital,Sushrutanagar,Darjeeling,West Bengal,India Gatruduodenal Intussception is by far a very rare clinical entity reported in the literature.We present a rare case in a 10 year old boy who… Continue Reading
Gastrointestinal Neuroendocrine Tumour: Case Series
A Amin, Mr, Anil Reddy, Mr, Ahmed Hammad, Mr, M Jha, Mr, Prasad Kolanu, Dr. James Cook University Hospital Introduction: Over 60% of all neuroendocrine tumours are found in the gastrointestinal tract. Gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumours are rare and constitute <2% of all gastrointestinal cancers. Most tumours are slow growing and asymptomatic, although metastatic lesion… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Minimally Invasive Other
Getting More for Your Money: Laparoscopic Rectal Surgery Provides Similar Short Term Outcomes and Shorter Length of Stay at Comparable Costs to Open Surgery
Krista Hardy, MSc MD, Josephine Kwong, BScH MPA, Kristen Pitzul, BScH MSc, Ashley Vergis, MD MMed, Timothy Jackson, MD MPH, David Urbach, MD MSc, Allan Okrainec, MD MHPE. University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man., Department of General Surgery, University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont., Canada Introduction: The benefits of laparoscopic surgery in the… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Colorectal
Globalization of Undergraduate Surgical Education: A Unique Educational Experience at the Ircad France.
Vivian De Ruijter, Michele Diana, MD, Silvana Perretta, MD, Luc Soler, PhD, James Wall, MD, Susana Maia, MD, Thomas Parent, Didier Mutter, MD PhD FACS, Bernard Dallemagne, MD, Jacques Marescaux, MD Hon FRCS FACS JSES. IRCAD, University of Strasbourg, France INTRODUCTION: Undergraduate medical students across the world have expressed the need for an early… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Education / Simulation
Gpu-Accelerated Real-time Tissue Reconstruction for Semi-Automated In-vivo Surgery
Jedrzej Kowalczuk, MS, Jay Carlson, BS, Eric T Psota, PhD, Lance Perez, PhD, Shane Farritor, PhD, Dmitry Oleynikov, MD. University of Nebraska Medical Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Introduction: The objective of this study is to demonstrate the feasibility of a stereoscopic video system for three-dimensional reconstruction of the surgical environment. The availability of accurate… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Podium Presentations
- Topic:
- Robotics
Hepatic Inflow Restriction Device
During partial hepatectomy, most commonly performed for the treatment of liver tumors, blood loss is a significant patient risk, as the liver is a highly vascular organ with blood flow rates on the order of 1500 ml/min., which is approximately 25% of total cardiac output. Excessive liver bed bleeding can also obscure the operative field,… Continue Reading
Hiatal Hernia After the Esophagectomy Repaired By Laparoscopic Surgery
Jun Iwabu, Hiroyuki Kitagawa, Tsutomu Namikawa, Michiya Kobayashi, Kazuhiro Hanazaki. Kochi Medical School IntroductionLaparoscopic surgery has an advantage at the point of less abdominal adhesion compared with open laparotomy. Since 2005, we had introduced the total laparoscopic gastric mobilization (TLGM) for esophagectomy as a less invasive surgery, and experienced a case of incarcerated hiatal… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Abdominal Wall Hernias
Hiatal Hernia Repair in Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Significantly Improves Reflux But Not Weight Loss
Daniel Moon, MD, Ahmad Bashir, MD, Jennifer Higa, BS MPH, Saber Ghiassi, MD MPH, Tienchin Ho, MD FACS, Keith Boone, MD FACS, Kelvin Higa, MD FACS. Department of Surgery, UCSF- Fresno Medical Education Program Introduction: Hiatal hernia repair during laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding has been shown to improve outcomes and surgical reoperations. We questioned… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Metabolic / Obesity
High Incidence of Symptomatic Incisional Hernia After Midline Extraction in Laparoscopic Colon Resection
Lawrence Lee, MD, Benjamin Mappin-kasirer, Chao Li, MD, Pepa Kaneva, MSc, Barry Stein, MD, Patrick Charlebois, MD, Sender Liberman, MD, Melina Vassiliou, MD, Gerald M Fried, MD, Liane S Feldman, MD. Steinberg-Bernstein Centre for Minimally Invasive Surgery and Innovation, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada Background: The incidence of incisional hernia (IH) has not decreased… Continue Reading
- Type:
- Posters
- Topic:
- Abdominal Wall Hernias