Complete laparoscopic and Da Vinci robot esophagogastric anastomosis double muscle flap plasty for radical resection of proximal gastric cancer
Dong Yang, Yuanlin Liu, Xiangyu Meng, Xing Xu, Chao Wang, Meng Zhang, Tao Zhang

TL;DR
This study compares robotic and laparoscopic surgeries for treating proximal gastric cancer, finding that robotic surgery offers faster recovery and less bleeding, though it is more expensive.
Contribution
The study introduces a complete laparoscopic and robotic approach for esophagogastric anastomosis in gastric cancer surgery, highlighting its clinical benefits.
Findings
Robotic surgery resulted in less intraoperative blood loss and faster postoperative recovery compared to laparoscopic surgery.
Both methods effectively prevented reflux esophagitis and maintained good nutritional status in patients.
Robotic surgery was associated with a higher cost but showed advantages in surgical precision and recovery time.
Abstract
To investigate the application value of complete laparoscopy and Da Vinci robot esophagogastric anastomosis double muscle flap plasty in radical resection of proximal gastric cancer. A retrospective descriptive study was used. The clinicopathological data of 35 patients undergoing radical operation for proximal gastric cancer admitted to Liaoning Cancer Hospital from January 2020 to December 2023 were collected. Variables evaluated: 1. Transoperative,2. Postoperative, 3. Follow-up. In relation to follow-up, esophageal disease status reflux, anastomosis, nutritional status score, serum hemoglobin, tumor recurrence, and metastasis were investigated. The trans and postoperative variables were obtained from the clinical records and the patients were followed up in outpatient department and by telephone. Among the 35 patients, 17 underwent robotic surgery and 18 underwent laparoscopic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastric Cancer Management and Outcomes · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment · Gastrointestinal Tumor Research and Treatment
