目的 用保留十二指肠水平段的胰十二指肠切除术及Roux-Y同步吻合重建消化道的方法,达到降低手术并发症,促进患者恢复,提高其生存质量和时间。方法 在行胰十二指肠切除术时,保留十二指肠水平段、升段、屈氏韧带及空肠上段,用RouxY同步吻合的方法将胰、胆、胃、肠重建排列,术后胆肠吻合口不置T管及空肠不置造瘘管,腹腔置2 mm硅胶管用于灌洗。结果 28例中除2例切口裂开,行二期缝合外,均顺利恢复出院。平均住院25天。无胆、胰漏,无返流性胆管、胰管炎等。随访6个月~6年,1年生存24例(85.7%),3年生存15例(53.6%),5年生存5例(17.9%)。结论 保留十二指肠水平段,消化功能恢复快,不影响根治时相关淋巴结的廓清。用Roux-Y同步吻合重建消化道,并发症少。不置T管和空肠造瘘管,对患者侵扰小,恢复快,提高了患者生存率。
ObjectiveTo review the current clinical application of Beger procedure and Frey procedure for benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. MethodsRelevant literatures about current advance of clinical application of Beger procedure and Frey procedure published recently of domestic and abroad were collected and reviewed. ResultsWith the concept of organ-preserving operations was adopted in recent years, Beger procedure and Frey procedure were applied generally. Beger procedure and Frey procedure were associated with tolerable perioperative risk, postoperative complications, and good outcomes in the aspects of preservation of function and curability in these lesions compared to conventional pancreatectomy, with preservation of the physiological food passage, thus patients gained weight faster, had less pain, and demonstrated better exocrine and endocrine pancreatic function postoperatively and an improvement in the quality of life. Both procedures had reached an international position as a standard operation for the treatment of benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. But after long-term following-up early advantages were no longer present. ConclusionsBeger procedure and Frey procedure are safe and effective in providing good outcomes in the aspects of preservation of function and curability in benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. Organ-preserving pancreatectomy could become a new organ-preserving standard operation.
ObjectiveTo explore the value of duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection for benign lesions in pancreatic head. MethodsClinical data of 14 patients with benign lesions in pancreatic head who were underwent duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection from Jan. 1995 to Dec. 2012 were retrospectively analyzed, to explore the value of the surgery. ResultsAll surgeries of the 14 patients were success. The operation time were 4.0-6.5 hours (5.2 hours on average), the intraoperative blood loss were 100-1 000 mL (450 mL on average). Postoperative complications happened in 3 patients (21.4%), including pancreatic fistula in 2 patients and biliary fistula in 1 patient, which were cured with non-surgical treatment. No deaths happened during surgery and hospitalization. Of the 14 patients, 13 patients were followed-up for 6 months to 2 years with no recurrence, diabetes, postoperative gastric emptying disorders, and other long-term complications happened. ConclusionDuodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection is the safe and effective treatment of benign lesions in the head of pancreas.
ObjectiveTo estimate the prognosis of duodenum-preserving resection of pancreatic head (DPRPH) in the treatment of space occupying with extensive calcification of pancreatic head, and to summarize the key points of surgery.MethodsThe clinical data of a middle-aged woman with rare space occupying with extensive calcification of pancreatic head who underwent surgery in Department of Pancreatic Surgery of West China Hospital in May. 2016 was collected and analyzed.ResultsThe DPRPH operation was successfully completed, with the operative time was 207 min, the intraoperative blood loss was 130 mL, and the hospital stay was 12 d. Removing time of the gastric tube and off-bed activity were on the 3rd day after operation, and the volume of peritoneal drainage per day was decreasing from 30 mL to 10 mL until 7th day after operation. We made examination of serum amylase and fluid amylase for the patient every 2 days, and the examination indexes were within normal level. After removing the peritoneal drainage tube, the pain was obviously relieved on the 12th day after operation, then the patient made hospital discharge. There was no observable pancreatic fistula, duodenal fistula, biliary fistula, delay gastric emptying, peritoneal effusion, pleural effusion, abdominal infection, and abdominal bleeding, neither nor any special discomfort. During the follow-up period of 18 months, we got a good prognosis without any symptom of relapse or discomfort according to the result of CT scans and other examinations.ConclusionDPRPH can make a satisfied prognosis in the treatment of rare space occupying with extensive calcification of pancreatic head.
ObjectiveTo summarize of clinical application and progress of duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection (DPPHR).MethodThe relevant literatures published recently at domestic and abroad about the clinical application and progress of DPPHR were collected and reviewed.ResultsFor the benign lesions, low-grade malignancies and borderline tumors of the head of pancreas, the DPPHR could achieve the same expected therapeutic effect as the classical pancreatoduodenectomy. The DPPHR could reserve the continuity of stomach and duodenum while resecting lesions and improve the symptoms of patients, reduce the reconstruction of digestive tract and the resection of pancreas and surrounding tissues as much as possible, and retain the pancreas-intestinal axis, which was more in line with the physiology of human beings.ConclusionsAt present, DPPHR is worthy of further development and promotion in department of pancreas surgery, but current studies only focus on occurrence of short-term complications after operation. Because patients with benign diseases of pancreatic head have better prognosis and longer survival time after operation, we should pay attention to the long-term complications such as diarrhea, anemia and reflux cholangitis. More clinical studies need in future to be demonstrated superiority of DPPHR in clinical efficacy and to evaluate occurrence of long-term complications and their impact on quality of life of patients with DPPHR by comprehensive analysis of multiple evaluation indicators.
ObjectiveTo summarize and analyze the long-term clinical effect of duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection (DPPHR) versus pancreaticoduodenectomy.MethodsThe clinical data of 102 patients who underwent DPPHR (n=35) or pancreaticoduodenectomy (n=67) from January 2014 to December 2019 in The First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University were analyzed retrospectively.ResultsThe operations of patients in the DPPHR group and the PD group were successfully complete, no one died during operation or perioperative period. The weight gain in one year after operation and incidences of exocrine dysfunction in the DPPHR group were all better than those of the PD group (P<0.05), but there was no significant difference on the other complications between the two groups (P>0.05). The pain score, diarrhea score, and the overall health status score in one year after operation significantly improved in the DPPHR group than those in the PD group (P<0.05).ConclusionDPPHR is more beneficial to improve the quality of life after operation, and is a better surgical procedure for benign and low-grade malignant diseases of pancreatic head.
Objective To summarize the preoperative CT three-dimensional reconstruction, and administration and visualization of indocyanine green (ICG) during ICG-assisted laparoscopic duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection (LDPPHR). Methods A 56-year-old female patient admitted to the Department of Biliary Surgery in West China Hospital in April 2022 was retrospectively analyzed. The patient was considered the possibility of benign tumor of pancreatic head, and underwent LDPPHR. Three-dimensional CT reconstruction was performed before operation, and ICG (5 mg) was injected intravenously preoperative and intraoperative to complete LDPPHR. Results Preoperative three-dimensional CT reconstruction can assist in judging the course and relationship of anterior and posterior pancreaticoduodenal arterial arch and surrounding main blood vessels. After intravenous injection of 5 mg ICG 24 hours before operation, the common bile duct at the upper edge of pancreas was clearly visualized, and the cystic mass was judged not to communicate with bile duct and pancreatic duct. But it was difficult to identify the pancreatic segment of the common bile duct in fluorescence mode, ICG 5 mg was injected intravenously during the resection stage, and then the common bile duct was obviously visualized. After the resection stage, injected ICG (5 mg) intravenously again. Within 1 min, the fluorescence of the duodenum was enhanced, which suggested that the blood perfusion of duodenum was well. The operative time was 280 min, the blood loss was about 200 mL. On the 10th day after operation, the patient developed transient gastrointestinal bleeding with bile leakage, which improved after symptomatic treatment and was discharged on the 19th day. Postoperative pathological examination diagnosed pancreatic serous cystadenoma. Conclusions Three-dimensional reconstruction and ICG assisted LPDDHR can successfully visualize and identify the blood vessels and bile ducts, and check the duodenal blood perfusion. Which can making the operation more accurate and visual is a powerful guarantee for LDPPHR to be carried out safely and effectively.
ObjectiveTo explore the advantages and disadvantages of duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection (DPPHR) in the clinical application of pancreatic surgical diseases, and to summarize the progress of minimally invasive application of DPPHR combined with the current application of laparoscopy and robot surgery in pancreatic surgery. MethodThe related research literatures about DPPHR at home and abroad in recent years were searched and reviewed. ResultsThe effect of DPPHR compared with traditional pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD) for treatment of benign pancreatic diseases was still controversial, and the postoperative remission effect, perioperative period, occurrence of long-term complications and improvement of quality of life were not very advantageous compared with PD, and the prognosis of minimally invasive surgery was poor. ConclusionDPPHR remains highly controversial for surgical intervention in benign pancreatic disease and has enormous scope for advances in minimally invasive surgical applications in pancreatic surgery, but more clinical studies are needed to verify its clinical efficacy.
ObjectiveTo explore the clinical efficacy and summarize the experience of intracapsular approach used in laparoscopic duodenum-preserving total pancreatic head resection (LDPPHRt). MethodThe clinical data of patients (from April 2020 to June 2024), including preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative details who underwent LDPPHRt in Department of Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery, Affiliated Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology were collected and analyzed. ResultsSeventy-five patients were collected in this study, including 35 males (46.7%) and 40 females (53.3%). The age was (38.3±7.9) years old, and 35 patients (46.7%) presented without symptoms. The main symptoms were abdominal pain (21 cases, 28.0%), repeated diarrhea (15 cases, 20.0%), weight loss (4 cases, 5.3%). The diameter of the pancreatic head lesions was (3.2±0.8) cm. The operative time was (210.6±23.8) min, and the blood loss was (62.4±38.1) mL. There were 18 cases (24.0%) of postoperative complications, including 6 cases (8.0%) of postoperative pancreatic fistula, 5 cases (6.7%) of haemorrhage, 4 cases (5.3%) of biliary leakage, 2 cases (2.7%) of lymphatic leakage, 4 cases (5.3%) of delayed gastric emptying, 2 cases (2.7%) of abdominal infection, 1 case (1.3%) of pulmonary infection and 2 cases (2.7%) of wound infection. The length of postoperative hospital stay was (11.7±3.3) d, and no one died within 90 d after surgery. ConclusionsThe intracapsular approach is a feasible and safe surgical procedure in LDPPHRt for patients with benign, borderline or low grade malignant tumors.