1. Early experience with laparoendoscopic single-site surgery in the pediatric urology patient population
- Author
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Marvalyn DeCambre, Sarah Marietti, Karen Kling, George Chiang, and Timothy J. Fairbanks
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Port (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Laparoscopy ,Child ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Hernia repair ,Nephrectomy ,Pediatric urology ,Surgery ,Patient population ,Single site surgery ,Urologic Surgical Procedures ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
To present our initial experience with single-incision laparoscopy in the pediatric urologic population.Four patients underwent eight single-incision laparoscopic procedures. One patient underwent bilateral nephrectomies, a hernia repair, and an orchiectomy. The remaining three patients underwent unilateral nephrectomies. All procedures were performed in children using the Covidien SILS port system via an umbilical incision.Procedures in three of four patients, representing seven of eight cases, were successfully performed via a single incision. Operative times ranged from 114 minutes to 360 minutes. There were no conversions to traditional laparoscopy. One nephrectomy was converted to an open procedure secondary to bleeding. There were no complications postoperatively, and at follow-up, all wounds were well healed.Single-incision laparoscopic urologic surgery is safe and feasible in the pediatric population. The umbilical (trans or peri) approach confers improved cosmesis over traditional laparoscopy, and the scar is essentially concealed.
- Published
- 2010