ABSTRACT
Currently laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the gold standard of therapy for diseases related with gallstones, namely symptomatic cholecystolithiasis, acute and chronic cholecystitis and also as therapy for gallbladder adenoids. Together with laparoscopic appendectomy, this procedure often is one of the first laparoscopic operations performed by new interns. Therefore a standardised, reproducible approach to ensure the patient safety is necessary. The procedure can be subdivided into 10 substeps--so-called "nodal points"--which must be completed before the next substep can be started. This article and the attached video show the ten "nodal points" of a standardised laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Subject(s)
Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic/education , Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic/standards , Cholecystolithiasis/surgery , Internship and Residency , Video-Assisted Surgery/education , Benchmarking/standards , Cholecystolithiasis/diagnosis , Germany , Humans , Patient SafetyABSTRACT
Despite the introduction of proton pump inhibitors and modern flexible endoscopy techniques, upper gastrointestinal bleeding is still a common and serious condition. Once considered the domain of surgery, it is now uncommon to treat endoscopically controllable bleeding surgically. Therefore, most surgically treated cases are complicated and associated with a high mortality rate. This article presents the current management of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Besides the description of current endoscopic treatment, medical prophylaxis and treatment, as well as radiological intervention, the article describes the indication and the surgical procedure.