The investigators hypothesize that staple line reinforcement will result in a higher leak pressure than a non-reinforced staple line closure in the resected gastric specimens from laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. The primary endpoint of the study is leak pressure after various staple line treatments. The investigators will also analyze the most common site of specimen leak, association of stomach thickness to leak, association of stomach thickness to performance of the staple line techniques, and a cost analysis.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the mechanical strength of various staple line reinforcement techniques using the resected portion of stomach in patients undergoing laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. The specimen will be collected at the time of surgery, the previous staple line will be excised, and a new staple line with one of the investigatory reinforcement procedures will be applied. The staple line techniques to be used in this study include non-buttressed and non-imbricated oversewing, non-buttressed and imbricated suture line, buttressed stapling, and no reinforcement (see protocol for description of each). The specimen will then be taken to the morgue where the experimental procedure will be performed within 6 hours of specimen procurement. The specimen will be attached to a catheter with a pressure monitor and blue dye will be instilled into the specimen until leakage is seen. The presence of leakage indicates failure of the staple line. Detailed measurements of all specimens will be performed as will leak pressure and location in the specimen where leak occurred. The specimen will then be turned over to pathology to undergo routine pathologic examination. This experimental procedure has been used previously in published literature with animal samples, but never with human tissue. A possible reason for the lack of testing in the stomach staple line in patients after sleeve gastrectomy is that the technical aspects of bariatric surgery were developed using gastric bypass; a procedure where the stomach is divided but not excised. The investigators hypothesize that the specimens treated with staple line buttressing material will fail at a higher pressure than those without reinforcement. The investigators will also explore the location of the failure to determine if there is a consistent site of weakness. Should this study yield consistent results, it would help determine a standard approach for staple line reinforcement after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. Additionally, should the location of the leak be consistent, this information may help drive technical changes that could decrease leak rate, an infrequent but potentially devastating risk of this and other weight loss surgeries.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
A 1 cm gastrotomy will be made with a purse-string suture placed around the defect. A fluid-instillation catheter will be inserted into the specimen via the gastrotomy. The purse-string suture will then be secured around the catheter. The catheter will be fenestrated with a flange to prevent leakage from the gastrotomy site. The catheter will be attached to a Biopac pressure-monitoring device to monitor pressure within the lumen of the specimen. The specimen will then be suspended in a water bath and methylene blue saline solution will be injected into the specimen to a pressure reading of 0. This will be time zero for our experiment. Methylene blue saline solution will then be injected steadily in incremental levels. During this process, the study team will observe for any obvious blue dye leaks at the staple line or drop in pressure on the monitor.
Bursting pressure
The primary outcome will be assessed by inflating the resected stomach specimen (after staple line reinforcement and placement of pressure monitor within specimen) with a methylene blue saline solution until a leak is observed or drop in pressure on the monitor.
Time frame: This will be measured within 6 hours of the specimen being resected from the patient.
Most common leak site
The site of leak will be documented. This outcome will be observed by the individual testing the leak pressure of the specimen.
Time frame: This will be measured within 6 hours of the specimen being resected from the patient.
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