Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop

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Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop

description

Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop. PGY 1. Name the Instruments. PGY 1. Name the Instruments. PGY 1. Name the Instruments. PGY 1. Commonly used Sutures. PGY 2. Lembert Sutures. Definition? Reason?. PGY 2. Connell Sutures. Describe Connell suturing technique. Staplers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop

Page 1: Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop

Vascular and Intestinal Anastomotic Workshop

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Name the InstrumentsPGY 1

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Name the InstrumentsPGY 1

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Name the InstrumentsPGY 1

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Commonly used SuturesBraided? Absorbable? Timeline # of throws

Silk Braided no n/a 3-4

Vicryl Braided yes 55-70 days 4-5

Prolene Mono no n/a 6-8

Chromic Mono yes 90 days 4-5

PDS Mono yes 180-210 days 6-8

Nylon Mono no n/a ~5

Gore Mono no n/a ~8

Monocryl Mono yes 90-120 days 5

PGY 1

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Lembert Sutures

• Definition?• Reason?

PGY 2

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Connell Sutures

• Describe Connell suturing technique

PGY 2

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Staplers

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Name the StaplerPGY 2

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Name the Stapler…PGY 2

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Name the StaplerPGY 2

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Side to side anastomosis

• How do you set up a side to side anastomosis?

CRITICAL CONCEPTS• Non-tension• GIA stapler• Align anti-mesenteric

sides of bowel together• Staggered staple lines

PGY 2

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End-to-end Anastomosis

• How do you set up a stapled end-to-end anastomosis?

PGY 2

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Functional End-to-end anastomosis

• Describe another way to perform a stapled end to end anastoamosis

PGY 2

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Stapler Loads• What is the difference

between the different stapler loads?

• What color load do

you use for vascular tissue? Stomach? Small bowel? Colon? Rectum?

PGY 3

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Hand Sewn Anastomosis

• Describe the different types of suture techniques used in hand sewn bowel anastomosis

PGY 3

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Hand Sewn Anastomosis

• Describe the steps for a 2 layer anastomosis

PGY 3

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Hand Sewn Anastomosis

• Describe how to sew a single layer anastamosis

PGY 3

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Arm Vascular Anatomy

• Describe the arterial and venous blood flow to the arm

PGY 2

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Types of Surgical Dialysis Access

• What is the difference between an AV Fistulae and an AV Graft

PGY 2

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Sites for AV fistulae

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Radiocephalic AV Fistula

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Brachiocephalic AV graft

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Basilic Vein Transposition

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DRIL procedure

• DRIL = Distal Revascularization Interval Ligation

• RUDI = Revision Using Distal Inflow

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Vascular Anastomosis

• Identify autogenous materials for vascular anastomosis: – Saphenous vein, iliac vein

• Identify exogenous materials for vascular anastomosis: – bovine pericardium, ePTFE, gore-tex, cadaveric

• What is the dosing/timing for heparinization during a vascular anastomosis? – 75-100 units/kg, given 5 minutes prior to vascular occlusion

• How do you measure heparinization to confirm appropriate levels have been achieved? – Activated clotting time (ACT) of greater than 250

PGY 3

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Zones of Retroperitoneum• Describe the Zones of the retroperitoneum

and the major vasculature that could be injured in each zone

• Zone 1: Midline retroperitoneum– Supramesocolic region (suprarenal aorta,

celiac, SMA/SMV, proximal renal artery)– Inframesocolic region (infrarenal aorta,

infrarenal IVC)• Zone 2: Upper lateral retroperitoneum

(renal artery/vein)• Zone 3: Pelvic retroperitoneum (iliac

artery/vein)

PGY 3

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Zone I Great Vessel Injury

• Describe the approach for supramesocolic Zone I injuries: – Left medial visceral

mobilization– May also need to

transect the left crus (at 2o’clock position) to allow for control of the descending thoracic aorta

PGY 3

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Zone I Great Vessel Injury

• Describe the approach for inframesocolic Zone I injuries:– Lift up on transverse mesocolon,

eviscerate small bowel to right, open mid-line retroperitoneum and cross clamp the aorta inferior to the left renal vein

– For IVC injuries, perform a right medial visceral mobilization (right colon and duodenum), leaving the kidney in situ

PGY 3

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Zone I Great Vessel Injury

• Describe the approach to an inframesocolic Zone I injury to the IVC at the common iliac vein confluence: – After right medial visceral mobilization, it may be

necessary to divide and ligate the right internal iliac artery or to temporarily divide the right common iliac artery

PGY 3

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Zone I Great Vessel Injury

• Describe the approach to an inframesocolic Zone I injury to the IVC at the level of the renal veins:– After right medial visceral mobilization, you should

clamp/compress the IVC proximally and distally and loop/clamp both the left and right renal veins. It may be necessary to perform a medial mobilization of the right kidney (watch out for 1st lumbar vein!)

PGY 3