This talk was presented at the 2018 SAGES Meeting/16th World Congress of Endoscopic Surgery by Pokala R Kiran during the Intestinal Anastomosis: Hand Sewn to Intracorporeal – Newest Techniques to Improve Outcomes on April 12 2018
Keyword(s): absorbable suture, anastomotic construction, anastomotic leak, anastomotic stricture, antibiotics, apposition, AutoSuture, bacteria, blood supply, bowel prep, bowel preparation, bowel wall, burst pressure, catgut suture, complication, Covidien, Dexon, disease, dogs, double-layer anastomosis, emergency surgery, end-to-end anastomosis, foreign body, full thickness, gastrointestinal tract, Germany, GI tract, handsewn anastomosis, healing, human trial, IBD, in vivo, inflammation, inflammatory bowel disease, intestinal anastomosis, intracorporeal anastomosis, Johnson & Johnson, lumen, magnamosis, mechanical preparation, meta-analysis, microbiome, monofilament suture, morbidity, mortality, necrosis, outcomes, pathogenesis, permanent suture, primary endpoint, prototype, seromuscular layer, sheep, side-to-side anastomosis, single-layer anastomosis, staplers, submucosa, suture material, synthetic suture, technique, tensile strength, wounds, x-ray
Anastomosis & leaks–44 sec
Factors associated with leak–1:22
Anastomotic healing–2:14
Intestinal healing–3:42
Sutured anastomosis–5:24
Suture material properties–5:40
Data–7:54 Acta Chir Acad Sci Hung 1979
Staplers–10:57
Stapled vs handsewn anastomoses–11:59 Langenbecks Arch Surg 2015
Magnamosis–12:47
Compression vs conventional anastomosis–13:39 Tech Coloproctol 2016
Summary–13:56