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Experimental assessment of three electrosurgical tissue-sealing devices in a porcine model.

Authors :
Dunay MP
Lipcsey Z
Arany-Tóth A
Németh T
Solymosi N
Venczel L
Nagy E
Pap-Szekeres J
Source :
Acta veterinaria Hungarica [Acta Vet Hung] 2020 Sep 30; Vol. 68 (3), pp. 318-322. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Sep 30.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Three electrosurgical tissue-sealing devices (EnSeal ETSDRC-01, LigaSure LS1500 and Thunderbeat TB-0535PC) were compared regarding sealing time (ST), maximum working temperature (WTmax) and the total (MTZtotal) as well as the collateral microscopic thermal injury zone (MTZcollat) using laparoscopic handpieces 5 mm in diameter on four types of tissue (liver, mesentery, cross striated muscle and spleen) in an in vivo porcine model. LigaSure had the lowest mean ST in spleen, mesentery, muscle and liver, followed by Thunderbeat and EnSeal with significant differences between all types of tissues and devices. The significantly lowest mean WTmax was obtained for EnSeal in mesentery, muscle and liver. LigaSure and EnSeal operated at the lowest temperature in spleen without a significant difference between them. Thunderbeat produced significantly higher temperature peaks in all cases. The lowest mean MTZtotal was caused by LigaSure and EnSeal in spleen, mesentery and muscle without significant differences between them, followed by the significantly higher values of Thunderbeat. Nevertheless, Thunderbeat produced the significantly lowest mean MTZtotal in the liver. EnSeal produced the lowest mean MTZcollat in the liver, followed by LigaSure and Thunderbeat showing significant differences. EnSeal and LigaSure produced the lowest mean MTZcollat in the spleen, mesentery and muscle without significant differences between them, followed by the significantly higher values of Thunderbeat. Based on the results of this study, Thunderbeat seems to be more invasive to tissue integrity (even without the activation of the ultrasonic scissor function) than EnSeal or LigaSure, that operate at lower temperatures and were found to cause negligible collateral thermal damage.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0236-6290
Volume :
68
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Acta veterinaria Hungarica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33136067
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1556/004.2020.00051