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      Is Open Access

      Anatomy relevant to cholecystectomy

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      Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
      Medknow Publications
      Anatomy, Biliary, Cholecystectomy, Gallbladder, Injury, Laparoscopy

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          Abstract

          This review discusses anatomical facts that are of relevance to the performance of a safe cholecystectomy. Misinterpretation of normal anatomy and anatomical variations contribute to the occurrence of major postoperative complications like biliary injuries following a cholecystectomy, the incidence being higher with laparoscopic cholecystectomy. A look at the basic anatomy is therefore important for biliary and minimally invasive surgeons. This includes normal anatomy and variations of the biliary apparatus as well as the arterial supply to the gallbladder. Specific anatomical distortions due to the laparoscopic technique, their contribution in producing injury and a preventive strategy based on this understanding are discussed. Investigative modalities that may help in assessing anatomy are considered. Newer insights into the role of anatomic illusions as well as the role of a system-based approach to preventing injuries is also discussed.

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          Most cited references6

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          An analysis of the problem of biliary injury during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

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            Causes and prevention of laparoscopic bile duct injuries: analysis of 252 cases from a human factors and cognitive psychology perspective.

            To apply human performance concepts in an attempt to understand the causes of and prevent laparoscopic bile duct injury. Powerful conceptual advances have been made in understanding the nature and limits of human performance. Applying these findings in high-risk activities, such as commercial aviation, has allowed the work environment to be restructured to substantially reduce human error. The authors analyzed 252 laparoscopic bile duct injuries according to the principles of the cognitive science of visual perception, judgment, and human error. The injury distribution was class I, 7%; class II, 22%; class III, 61%; and class IV, 10%. The data included operative radiographs, clinical records, and 22 videotapes of original operations. The primary cause of error in 97% of cases was a visual perceptual illusion. Faults in technical skill were present in only 3% of injuries. Knowledge and judgment errors were contributory but not primary. Sixty-four injuries (25%) were recognized at the index operation; the surgeon identified the problem early enough to limit the injury in only 15 (6%). In class III injuries the common duct, erroneously believed to be the cystic duct, was deliberately cut. This stemmed from an illusion of object form due to a specific uncommon configuration of the structures and the heuristic nature (unconscious assumptions) of human visual perception. The videotapes showed the persuasiveness of the illusion, and many operative reports described the operation as routine. Class II injuries resulted from a dissection too close to the common hepatic duct. Fundamentally an illusion, it was contributed to in some instances by working too deep in the triangle of Calot. These data show that errors leading to laparoscopic bile duct injuries stem principally from misperception, not errors of skill, knowledge, or judgment. The misperception was so compelling that in most cases the surgeon did not recognize a problem. Even when irregularities were identified, corrective feedback did not occur, which is characteristic of human thinking under firmly held assumptions. These findings illustrate the complexity of human error in surgery while simultaneously providing insights. They demonstrate that automatically attributing technical complications to behavioral factors that rely on the assumption of control is likely to be wrong. Finally, this study shows that there are only a few points within laparoscopic cholecystectomy where the complication-causing errors occur, which suggests that focused training to heighten vigilance might be able to decrease the incidence of bile duct injury.
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              Rouvière's sulcus: a useful landmark in laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Minim Access Surg
                JMAS
                Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
                Medknow Publications (India )
                0972-9941
                1998-3921
                June 2005
                : 1
                : 2
                : 53-58
                Affiliations
                Department of GI Surgery, Jaslok Hospital and Research Centre, G Deshmukh Marg, Mumbai, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Department of GI Surgery, Jaslok Hospital and Research Centre, G Deshmukh Marg, Mumbai - 400026, India. E-mail: nagral@ 123456vsnl.com
                Article
                JMAS-01-53
                10.4103/0972-9941.16527
                3004105
                21206646
                d91704ea-cad4-428e-bb64-d640fed53d09
                © Journal of Minimal Access Surgery

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 17 April 2005
                : 28 May 2005
                Categories
                CME Article

                Surgery
                laparoscopy,gallbladder,biliary,injury,cholecystectomy,anatomy
                Surgery
                laparoscopy, gallbladder, biliary, injury, cholecystectomy, anatomy

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