PREOPERATIVE
DIAGNOSIS: Symptomatic fibroid uterus.
POSTOPERATIVE
DIAGNOSIS: Symptomatic fibroid uterus.
PROCEDURE
PERFORMED: Robotic-assisted total laparoscopic
hysterectomy.
ANESTHESIA:
General.
EBL:
Minimal.
URINE
OUTPUT: Clear yellow urine throughout the course of
the procedure with blue-tinged urine at the end of the procedure secondary to
administration of indigo carmine dye.
SPECIMENS
SENT: Uterus and cervix.
COMPLICATIONS: None.
PROCEDURE
IN DETAIL: The patient was taken to the operating room
where she was identified as
herself, placed in the dorsal lithotomy position with general anesthesia
administered without difficulty. She was
prepped and draped in the usual sterile fashion and a weighted speculum was
placed in the vagina and a Deaver was placed anteriorly. The anterior lip of the cervix was grasped
with a single-tooth tenaculum and the cervix was dilated to accommodate the
VCare uterine manipulator, which was introduced into the uterine cavity with
the intrauterine balloon insufflated and the appropriately sized colpotomy
cup placed around the cervix snugly. The Deaver and tenaculum and speculum were
removed from the patient’s vagina, and attention was turned to the patient’s
abdomen. A 12-mm incision was made
approximately two fingerbreadths above the umbilicus, and a Veress needle was
introduced into the intraabdominal cavity.
Intraabdominal placement was confirmed by appropriate pressure readings. The abdomen was insufflated with CO2
gas. The Veress needle was removed, and
a 12-mm trocar was introduced with a 0-degree laparoscope confirming
intraabdominal placement. Findings were
that of slightly enlarged multifibroid uterus about 9 to 10 weeks in size,
boggy in appearance, suspicious for adenomyosis, it was otherwise completely
normal fallopian tubes and ovaries bilaterally.
The patient was placed in steep Trendelenburg positioning and the bowel
was displaced superiorly with the robotic trocar arms placed in the left lower
quadrant and right lower quadrants respectively under direct visualization
accommodating the 8-mm robotic trocar site.
A final fourth incision was made in the right upper quadrant to
accommodate a 12-mm surgical assistant port site. The da Vinci robot was subsequently docked
without any complications, and I removed myself _____. After the surgical console, the surgery began
with my identification of the utero-ovarian ligaments on either side. These were cauterized and transected with the
bipolar cautery and then the EndoShears.
This was followed by the round ligament, which was cauterized and
transected in a similar fashion. The
anterior leaf of the broad ligament was entered and the bladder flap dissected
off of the lower uterine segment and cervix without complications. The uterine arteries bilaterally were
skeletonized, cauterized, and transected.
At this time, the uterus was blanched effectively demonstrating that the
blood supply to the uterus had been terminated.
The colpotomy cup was made with the monopolar spatula and carried around
the entire cervicovaginal junction until the cervix and uterus were released
from its moorings to the vagina. The
cervix and uterus were pulled into the vagina where it provided
pneumo-occlusion while I proceeded to close the vaginal cuff with a running #0
Vicryl suture for excellent hemostasis and reapproximation.
The abdomen was
copiously irrigated, cleared of all clots and debris, and the pedicles were
examined and noted to be hemostatic. The
ureters were examined bilaterally and noted to be peristalsing normally with
again indigo carmine dye noted to be draining into the Foley catheter with no
extravasation into the pelvic cavity.
All the instruments were subsequently removed from the patient’s abdomen
and vagina, and the two 12-mm fascial defects in the right upper quadrant and
the above the umbilicus were closed with #0 Vicryl stitch, and the four skin
incisions were closed with #4-0 Monocryl for excellent hemostasis and
reapproximation. The patient was taken
to recovery room in stable and awake condition with plans for discharge home
tomorrow morning. Surgery was discussed
in depth with the patient’s family with all questions answered.
This is very fascinating, thanks for sharing. My sister told me that one of her friends has to go through a laparoscopic hysterectomy and she is a little freaked out about it. I hope that procedures like this can work well with good results.
ReplyDeleteIf you have a uterine issue that has not improved with prior therapies, your surgeon might advise a robotic assisted hysterectomy The urologist of the World of Urology in this treatment uses a computer to control the surgical instruments so that he or she has a better view of the operation than with conventional laparoscopic surgery.
ReplyDeleteTrust World of Urology's commitment to innovation and expert care as we continue to redefine urogynecological treatments through robotic-assisted hysterectomy. robotic assisted hysterectomy The treatment offers patients numerous benefits, including minimal invasiveness, faster recovery, and reduced discomfort. Led by skilled urogynecologists
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