Impact of previous abdominal surgery on colorectal laparoscopy results: a comparative clinical study
Date
2006Abstract
To assess the results of laparoscopic colorectal surgery
in patients who have previously undergone abdominal surgery.
Between November 2002 and June 2004, 86 patients underwent
laparoscopic surgery for colorectal disease at our hospital.
Patients were divided into 2 groups depending on whether they
had previously undergone abdominal surgery (previous surgery
group, n = 27) or not (nonprevious surgery group, n = 59).
Data were prospectively collected for statistical analyses of
demographic, clinical, and histologic variables. Groups were
comparable in age, body mass index, American Society of
Anesthesiologists score, diagnosis, technique performed, and
tumor size and distance to anal verge. There was no difference in
perioperative complication rates. A higher conversion rate was
found in the previous surgery group (26.1% vs. 5.1%, P = 0.02).
In patients with tumor diseases, resection evaluations were no
different regarding specimen length, distal and radial resection
margins, or number of lymph nodes harvested. Laparoscopic
colorectal surgery has proved to be a reliable technique for
patients who have previously undergone abdominal surgery, its
results comparable to those obtained with patients who have
not.