Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in a community hospital: experience with 600 laparoscopic cholecystectomies. 1994

G B Williams, and R S Silverman
Department of Surgery, Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, Akron.

We reviewed 600 patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) in a teaching community hospital from May 1990 to August 1992. The safety, efficacy, morbidity, and mortality of LC, as performed by one surgeon or under his direct supervision, were studied. Five hundred forty-eight patients (91.3%) were treated electively; 52 (8.7%) were admitted for acute cholecystitis (41) or gallstone pancreatitis (11). Mean operating time was 54 min, with a range of 20 to 145 min. Twenty-four (4%) patients required conversion to traditional (open) cholecystectomy. Operative cholangiograms were completed in 106 patients. These revealed choledocholithiasis in 7. Five hundred thirty-seven patients (89.5%) were discharged within 24 h and 564 (94%) within 48 h. The overall morbidity of 9.2% compared favorably with both open and laparoscopic series previously reported. Three patients (0.5%) had small lacerations of the anterior wall of the common duct. Two were recognized and repaired immediately. The third patient came for treatment on the fifth postoperative day and was stented by a T-tube. There was 1 death in this group--a myocardial infarction on postoperative day 4.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007431 Intraoperative Complications Complications that affect patients during surgery. They may or may not be associated with the disease for which the surgery is done, or within the same surgical procedure. Peroperative Complications,Surgical Injuries,Complication, Intraoperative,Complication, Peroperative,Injuries, Surgical,Complications, Intraoperative,Complications, Peroperative,Injury, Surgical,Intraoperative Complication,Peroperative Complication,Surgical Injury
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D011183 Postoperative Complications Pathologic processes that affect patients after a surgical procedure. They may or may not be related to the disease for which the surgery was done, and they may or may not be direct results of the surgery. Complication, Postoperative,Complications, Postoperative,Postoperative Complication
D002763 Cholecystectomy Surgical removal of the GALLBLADDER. Cholecystectomies
D005260 Female Females
D006764 Hospitals, Community Institutions with permanent facilities and organized medical staff which provide the full range of hospital services primarily to a neighborhood area. Community Hospital,Community Hospitals,Hospital, Community
D006784 Hospitals, Teaching Hospitals engaged in educational and research programs, as well as providing medical care to the patients. Hospital, Teaching,Teaching Hospital,Teaching Hospitals
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012189 Retrospective Studies Studies used to test etiologic hypotheses in which inferences about an exposure to putative causal factors are derived from data relating to characteristics of persons under study or to events or experiences in their past. The essential feature is that some of the persons under study have the disease or outcome of interest and their characteristics are compared with those of unaffected persons. Retrospective Study,Studies, Retrospective,Study, Retrospective

Related Publications

G B Williams, and R S Silverman
July 1990, North Carolina medical journal,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
January 1996, The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
October 1992, Southern medical journal,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
April 1994, Military medicine,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
January 2000, Khirurgiia,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
January 1993, New Jersey medicine : the journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
January 1998, Surgery today,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
August 1992, Surgery, gynecology & obstetrics,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
February 1992, Canadian journal of surgery. Journal canadien de chirurgie,
G B Williams, and R S Silverman
February 1956, Revista brasileira de cirurgia,
Copied contents to your clipboard!