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Gastroenterology Medicine & Research

3D Laparoscopy: A Potential Cutting Edge in Minimal Invasive Digestive Surgery

Simone Sibio*, Sara di Carlo and Giuseppe S Sica

Department of Surgery, Italy

*Corresponding author: Simone Sibio, Department of Surgery, Italy

Submission: November 30, 2018 ;Published: December 04, 2018

DOI: 10.31031/GMR.2018.02.000539

ISSN 2637-7632
Volume2 Issue3

Abstract

Laparoscopic surgery has changed surgical landscape, providing reduced surgical trauma, shorter hospital stays, less postoperative pain and better outcomes than open surgery. Since its first development in the 90’s, 3D technology applied to laparoscopic surgery has had several technical improvements and now it represents, together with high definition technology, the best option in minimal invasive digestive surgery, providing shorter operative times and lower blood loss, making easier to perform surgical tasks both for trainees than for skilled surgeons. It remains a little bit more expensive than standard 2D laparoscopic devices but even cheaper than robotic equipment.

Editorial

Minimally invasive surgery has changed the way operations are performed. Since its advent in the early 1990s, laparoscopy has emerged as a catalyst of surgical renovation which rapidly has spread its application to the entire abdominal operations thanks to higher definition of graphic display, more visional comforts together with smaller incisions. The development of laparoscopic surgery has improved the outcome of patients by reducing surgical trauma, hospital stay, post-operative pain and allowing similar oncological results [1-8].

However, laparoscopy is more difficult to perform and to learn, mainly due to two-dimensional vision, lack of depth perception, little field of view, limited working space and impaired tactile feedback [9-13]. In 2D standard laparoscopy, the depth information loss is compensated by the surgeon experience and by the human brain ability to acquire secondary spatial depth landmarks during training and this explains the longer learning curves and training in laparoscopy [13,14].

Laparoscopy with 3D imaging has existed as a tentative alternative solution for over 20 years. The camera system in modern 3D-laparoscopes consists of 2 adjacent cameras (bichannel), which simulates the stereopsis obtained from the fusion of the slightly different views from the binocular disparity of the 2 human eyes, known as stereoscopy. The result is a fusion of the 2 images, similar to the direct view of stereopsis, and is perceived as a single image with increased depth perception [15]. The initial 3D display was mainly based on Shutter Glass technique, which provided poor-definition images and was harmful to surgeons eyes and could cause side effects for the surgeon, such as headaches, dizziness, disorientation and physical discomfort. 3D laparoscope characterized by Film-type Patterned Retarder (FPR) was subsequently invented. This new generation of 3D laparoscopic facility features high definition and stable image, alleviating the visional burdens of surgical operators and truly bringing laparoscopic operations into a tridimensional era [16]. Therefore, Buchs et al. [11] firstly reported a smooth operation by FPR glasses in 2012, and from then on, 3D laparoscopy began globally popularized among surgeon communities.

The modern 3D technique is superior in an experimental setting. The experimental setting reported better performances (speed, accuracy) with 3D vision, both in the expert and in the novice surgeons [17]. To date, there have been few clinical trials as 3D platforms are poorly disseminated in surgical practices, mainly due to cost reasons, especially if compared with the uncertain advantages that this new technique could offer. Some of them take in account only experimental setting (task performing) while only very few focused-on results on the most common surgical digestive procedures [18].

Early comparative trials of 3D laparoscopic system vs 2D laparoscopy have shown contradictory results. Some trials indicated stereoscopy as being the main reason for better outcome, whereas other trials found no difference between the two optical systems. Several trials have criticized the poor quality and tolerance as the illumination was found to be suboptimal especially when standard 3D laparoscopy was compared with 2D laparoscopy with a higher resolution [12,19]. Since then, there has been an advancement in the technology of stereoscopy. The better illumination and resolution in the new generation 3D laparoscopy with HD resolution probably render the results from earlier 3D system obsolete. The results in 2 clinical trials showed either no difference or superiority for 3D laparoscopy with regards to performance time. The results for the experimental trials showed predominantly an improvement in time and a reduction in number of errors with 3D laparoscopy.

The experimental setting does not reflect the complexity of clinical conditions and this could explain why neither operative time nor decrease in errors were reported in other clinical trials [20]. However, results from our initial experience with 3d laparoscopy on 95 patients (55 colorectal resections, 32 cholecystectomies, 5 gastrectomies, 3 distal pancreatectomies) showed that use of 3d device in most common digestive surgical procedures carry shorter operative time and lower blood loss, although complications, hospital stay and conversion rates, as well as hospital expenses do not change by using 3d rather than 2d laparoscopy [21]. These results are confirmed by those of a recent large metanalysis including 21 studies (13 retrospective and 8 randomized trials) which analyzed existing experiences on several similar digestive surgical procedures (cholecystectomy, appendectomy, gastric resections, colorectal resections, hepatectomy, oesophagectomy) [16,20,22,23].

As reported in available papers in literature, 3D vision seems to offer technical advantages in deep surgical fields, for vessel identification and ligation and in the accuracy of surgical manipulation as a result of the increased depth perception [18,20,24]. Currently, conclusive evidences that analyze the comparative efficacy of tridimensional laparoscopy remain in scarcity. Sorensen et al. [23] performed a systematic review of 3D laparoscopy vs 2D laparoscopy on simulated settings. Their results merely revealed a better performance on surgical tasks and trainings by tridimensional laparoscopy. By far, larger scale randomized trials on this topic are still lacking and no consensus has been reached among current literature. The main results, regarding comfort for the surgeon, have been investigated in simulated settings that have shown a better depth perception, hand-eyes coordination and accuracy.

The performances, in particular for novice surgeons, appear to be improved using 3D vision, with faster and more precise resolution of laparoscopic tasks [7,25-27] Sensation of neck and back pain, physical fatigue, nausea and dizziness have different rates between the clinical setting (in which they appear to be worse for 3D vision) and the simulated setting (in which they ameliorate for 3D vision), even if the worse results seem to be associated with earlier 3D systems [18]. Crosstalk and ghosting as a result of a non-optimal use of 3D visualization influences the laparoscopic performance and workload as shown by Sakata [28,29]. All these suggested that there is a need for further studies and investigation.

Conclusion

In conclusion, 3D technology has many perceived advantages and some limitations. The advantages include improving performance in minimally invasive surgery, offering stereoscopic depth and helping novice surgeons to orient themselves in the surgical landscape and complete complex tasks. This technology facilitates the recognition of diagnostically important shapes, alignment and anatomical features; increases anatomical appreciation for students with few visual spatial skills; and aids optical feedback. By contrast, the limitations of 3D visualization include its high cost and sporadic availability, the need for extra eyewear, operator dizziness and potential misperception. Despite these shortcomings, several studies shown that 3D vision quickens task completion mostly for more difficult tasks and that stereoscopic displays improve a novice’s performance during the acquisition of minimally invasive surgical skills.

More randomized controlled clinical trials are obviously in need to confirm positive experimental results.

Taken together, in our experience, we believe that threedimensional laparoscopy is a preferably technical option against two-dimensional laparoscopy for digestive surgery. Thus, a wider clinical application of 3D laparoscopy could be warmly recommended. If 3D equipment reduces operating or training time for new surgeons, the equipment may be a worthwhile investment even if three dimensional devices remain more expensive than standard 2D equipment. Nevertheless, 3D laparoscopy is more affordable than robotic systems, which also provide 3D vision.

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© 2018 Simone Sibio. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.