Localization of the nonpalpable colonic lesion with intraoperative ultrasound

Date

1999

Authors

Luck, A.
Thomas, M.
Roediger, W.
Hewett, P.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Surgical Endoscopy: surgical and interventional techniques, 1999; 13(5):526-527

Statement of Responsibility

A. J. Luck, M. L. Thomas, W. E. W. Roediger, P. J. Hewett

Conference Name

Abstract

Localization of an nonpalpable colonic lesion at the time of colectomy usually requires intraoperative colonoscopy. The use of ultrasound to locate the lesion has not been described. A soft bowel clamp is placed above the expected location of the lesion and a catheter placed in the anus. Saline is then instilled into the colon and rectum. The lesion is located by ultrasound scan of the fluid filled colon with the probe placed on the serosal surface. Refinement of the technique was performed on resected colonic specimens. An in vivo trial was then performed with rapid and accurate localization of the lesion for resection. Intraoperative ultrasound of the colon can accurately localize nonpalpable colonic lesions and is an alternative to currently available techniques of localization.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record