Laparoscopic Adrenal Surgery in a Brazilian Center

Autor: Castilho, Lísias N., Mitre, Anuar I., Arap, Sami
Zdroj: Journal of Endourology; February 2003, Vol. 17 Issue: 1 p11-18, 8p
Abstrakt: Background and Purpose:The laparoscopic approach to the adrenal gland was first reported in 1992. Since then, many publications about this issue have come from Europe, Japan, and North America. We reviewed our 7-year experience with laparoscopic adrenal surgery. This is the first large series presented from Latin America.Patients and Methods:Laparoscopic adrenalectomy was carried out in 61 female and 33 male patients between January 1994 and February 2001. Their ages ranged from 1 to 72 (42.8 ± 16.4 years) years. Ten patients (10.6%) were 20 years or younger, 10 (10.6%) had unilateral tumors >4 cm, 22 (23.4%) had a Body Mass Index ≥ 30, and 10 (10.6%) had had previous open upper abdominal surgery. The size of the lesion ranged from 1 to 9 cm (2.9 ± 4 cm). Ninety-seven operations were performed, of which 91 were unilateral and 6 were bilateral, adding up to 103 adrenalectomies. Among the 97 procedures, the lateral transperitoneal approach was employed in 94 cases, whereas a lateral retroperitoneal approach enabled 3 adrenalectomies.Results:Unilateral procedures lasted 117 ± 43.7 minutes (range 45-250 minutes); bilateral procedures lasted 186 ± 91.6 minutes (range 100-345 minutes). Five operations (5.1%) were converted to open surgery. Twenty patients (21.3%) suffered complications, 8 (8.5%) being intraoperative and 12 (12.8%) postoperative. Six cases (6.4%) were considered major complications. No deaths occurred. The blood transfusion rate was 4.2%. The hospital stay averaged 6.1 ± 15.3 days (range 1-140 days). The follow-up period was 17 ± 12.6 months (range 1-60 months).Conclusions:Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is feasible and has excellent results in properly selected patients.
Databáze: Supplemental Index