Possibia

3067038

Last Update Posted: 2017-03-01

Recruiting has ended

All Genders

accepted

20 Years-60 Years

2 Estimated Participants

No Expanded Access

Interventional Study

Accepts healthy volunteers

Single Incision Versus Three Port Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) became the standard treatment for symptomatic gallbladder disease. Single incision laparoscopic surgery (SILS) was developed with the aim of reducing the invasiveness of conventional laparoscopy. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical outcome of single-incision laparoscopic cholecystectomy (SILC) with three port laparoscopic cholecystectomy (TPLC).

From February 2014 to September 2016, patients with symptomatic cholecystolithiasis at two university hospitals (Sohag University and Qena University hospitals) were enrolled in this study.

The number of patients needed was calculated. Considering a power of 80% and reliability of 0.05, the investigator found that 76 patients should be present in each group. The study was started with 275 patients for the possible loss of patients and data during the study. Eligible patients (206 patients) were randomly divided equally into two groups (Group 1; SILC, Group 2; TPLC) according to a computer-generated random numbers. Of 103 patients allocated to intervention in each group, 14 patients were excluded from SILC group and 5 patients from TPLC group, and the remaining 89 & 98 patients in SILC & TPLC group respectively were included in the study.

Routine investigations and surgical fitness were done in all cases. Patient demographics, BMI, ASA score, indication for cholecystectomy, operative time, estimated blood loss, success and conversion rate, postoperative pain score, postoperative analgesia requirement, morbidity and mortality, length of hospital stay, and patient cosmetic satisfaction were recorded.

A fixed analgesia protocol with intravenous non-narcotic (ketorolac tromethamine 30 mg) was used twice daily. An opioid (pethidine Hcl 50 mg) was added when the pain cannot be tolerable. Postoperative pain was evaluated according to a visual analogue scale (VAS) from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain) on the postoperative sixth hour (VAS-6H) and on postoperative day one (VAS-24H). Patient cosmetic satisfaction was recorded at one month follow-up visit on a scale from 1 (worst) to 10 (best). Patients were shown the same photograph of a right sub-costal (Kocher) incision which was rated 0 on the cosmetic scale and were asked to rate their satisfaction based on the previous observation. The study protocol was approved by the local ethical committee. Also, a written informed consent was obtained from all patients' prior recruitment to study.

Eligibility

Relevant conditions:

Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

If you aren't sure if you meet the criteria above speak to your healthcare professional. Criteria may be updated but not reflected here, do not hesitate to contact the trial if you think are close to fitting criteria.

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Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov