Abstract

Background

Traditionally, the surgery for simultaneous double cancer of the stomach and colon required a large incision to the upper and lower region of the abdomen. In this case, an artificial blood vessel was located under the skin after revascularization. Considering ischemia due to graft compression by incision retractor during laparotomy, this was difficult to do. This is a report on laparoscopic surgery for simultaneous double cancer of the stomach and colon after revascularization.

Case presentation

A 69-year-old man had early gastric cancer and advanced sigmoid colon cancer. He had suffered from thromboangitis obliterans and has undergone revascularization many times due to poor blood flow in his lower limbs. He had had some artificial blood vessels inserted under the skin, confirmed by blood vessel construction image by preoperative computed tomography (CT). There was a bypass vessel from the left axillary artery to the left femoral artery under the skin of the left thoracoabdominal. In addition, there were two bypass vessels from the left external iliac artery to the right femoral artery under the skin of the lower abdomen. One of the two bypasses was occluded. In the blood flow to the intestinal tract, the inferior mesenteric artery was already occluded. Peripheral blood flow in the common iliac artery depended on blood flow from the artificial blood vessel, and blood flow from the internal iliac artery to the rectum was poor. Laparoscopic Hartmann’s operation was performed for Stage II B (UICC 8th Edition) sigmoid colon cancer. Because the blood flow in the intestinal tract on the anal side was poor, we thought that anastomosis was at a high risk for leakage. Laparoscopic total gastrectomy was also performed simultaneously for two Stage I (UICC 8th edition) gastric cancers in the cardia and body. The location of the port site and stoma was carefully determined preoperatively to prevent damage and infection to the artificial blood vessels. Minimal invasive surgery was performed using laparoscopic surgery.

Conclusions

Laparoscopic surgery with small incisions is useful for patients with double cancer who need an approach to the upper and lower abdomen. Furthermore, laparoscopic surgery has less interference on graft in patients with artificial blood vessels under the skin by intraperitoneal approach.

Details

Title
A case of simultaneous laparoscopic surgery for double cancer comprising multiple early gastric cancer and advanced sigmoid colon cancer after revascularization
Author
Takiguchi Koichi 1 ; Furuya Shinji 1 ; Sudo Makoto 1 ; Hirayama Kazuyoshi 1 ; Saito Ryo 1 ; Yamamoto Atsushi 1 ; Shoda Katsutoshi 1 ; Akaike Hidenori 1 ; Hosomura Naohiro 1 ; Kawaguchi Yoshihiko 1 ; Amemiya Hidetake 1 ; Kawaida Hiromichi 1 ; Kono, Hiroshi 1 ; Ichikawa Daisuke 1 

 University of Yamanashi, First Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Chuo, Japan (GRID:grid.267500.6) (ISNI:0000 0001 0291 3581) 
Publication year
2021
Publication date
Apr 2021
Publisher
International Academic Publishing Co Ltd.
e-ISSN
21987793
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2509907000
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.