Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

During any minimally invasive surgery case, 5-25mm size incisions need to be made to gain access to the abdomen. One of the most difficult, time-consuming, and sometimes unreliable parts of the case is closing these incisions, especially in obese patients. This is mainly because these incisions are very small and the layer that needs to be closed (fascia) rests deep underneath the skin and fat tissue of the abdominal wall. Two of the investigators (CM and BS) have developed at Stanford an instrument that allows for an easier and more reliable closure of these wounds. The purpose of this study is to test this instrument in the closure of laparoscopic wounds in obese patients undergoing laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery.


Clinical Trial Description

For the patients enrolling in this study, preoperative and postoperative care will be exactly the same. The operative procedure will also be very similar with the only modification being in the way the ports are closed at the end of the surgery and the fact that all ports 11mm or greater will be closed (instead of leaving 11 or 12mm ports to be closed at the discretion of the surgeon). Instead of using a suture-passer to place the suture through the fascia, the surgeon will use the new instrument to drive the suture into the tissue under direct visualization through the umbilical port camera. The same instrument but with new sutures will be used for each of the interrupted stitches that are usually placed to close the port.

The instrument that has been developed by some of the investigators is a 10mm elongated device that can easily be inserted into the port or fascial opening. If inserted through the port, the trocar can then be slid over the instrument to remove the trocar without losing pneumoperitoneum. The instrument has two opposing wings that will open once placed beyond the fascial opening. As the surgeon pulls up on the device, the wings open sliding along the fascia and pushing away any intra-abdominal contents that may be close to the instrument. Once the surgeon assures under direct visualization with the camera that the wings are open at both sides of the wound and that all intra-abdominal contents are out of the way (just as the surgeon would with the standard technique), he or she pushes a plunger that drives two flexible nitinol needles from the shaft of the instrument, through the fascia, and into the wings. The needles will be received in the wings by a set of couplers attached to the same suture that would be used otherwise (#0 Vycril). The surgeon then releases the wings and pulls out the device, leaving a looped suture placed around the opening. The surgeon can then tie the sutures as he or she would normally do on the standard procedure. At any time, the surgeon can reposition or remove the instrument without placing the sutures. The procedure may be repeated as many times as the surgeon considers necessary (usually 1 to close the 11 or 12mm fascial ports and 2 or 3 to close the 25mm fascial port). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01024296
Study type Interventional
Source Stanford University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date July 2009
Completion date March 2010

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06051578 - Abdominal Wall Tension in Patients Undergoing Ventral Hernia Repair Without Component Separation
Completed NCT06034652 - T-GENVIH-003 LTFU (Long Term Follow Up) Study
Not yet recruiting NCT06060951 - Relating Abdominal Complications With Peritoneal Pressure Estimation and Reporting
Not yet recruiting NCT05467124 - Enhanced Recovery After Abdominal Wall Reconstruction
Terminated NCT02233569 - Comparison of Two Mesh/Fixation Concepts for Laparoscopic Ventral and Incisional Hernia Repair N/A
Completed NCT03458845 - Prevalence of Sarcopenia and Undernutrition in Patients With Cirrhosis and Abdominal Hernia
Completed NCT02720042 - Study of Phasix™ Mesh for VHWG Grade 3 Midline Hernia Repair N/A
Recruiting NCT04422197 - This Randomized Controlled Study Aims to Investigate the Effect of Botox Injection in Abdominal Wall Muscle Post Major Abdominal Surgery in Terms of Postoperative Pain, Incidence of Incisional Hernia. N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06449378 - Transorb™ Self-Gripping Resorbable Mesh in High-risk Subjects Undergoing Open Repair of Ventral Hernia N/A
Withdrawn NCT03792295 - Multimodal Pain Therapy After Hernia Repair Phase 2
Completed NCT06111287 - Outcomes of Trasversus Abdominis Release for Complex Abdominal Wall Hernia
Completed NCT02734563 - Collagen Alterations in Patients With Abdominal Wall Hernias N/A
Completed NCT03846661 - Nationwide Long-term Outcome Surveillance of Physiomesh® vs. Other Meshes in Laparoscopic Incisional Hernia Repair N/A
Completed NCT01268514 - ENHANCE: A Prospective EvaluatioN of Permacol™ in tHe Repair of Complex AbdomiNal Wall CasEs
Recruiting NCT04476212 - Prophylaxis of Surgical Wound Infection With Topical Antibiotics N/A
Recruiting NCT04516031 - Transversus Abdominis Muscle Release Versus Mesh Only Repair in the Treatment of Complex Ventral Wall Hernia N/A