Article (Scientific journals)
First steps of laparoscopic surgery in Lubumbashi: problems encountered and preliminary results.
Arung, Willy; Dinganga, Nathalie; Ngoie, Emmanuel et al.
2015In Pan African Medical Journal, 21, p. 210
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
Arung.PAMJ.pdf
Publisher postprint (322.54 kB)
Download

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Adult; Appendectomy/statistics & numerical data; Democratic Republic of the Congo; Female; Humans; Laparoscopy/methods/statistics & numerical data; Laparotomy/statistics & numerical data; Male; Operative Time; Laparoscopy surgery; Lubumbashi; adhesiolysis; appendicetomy; cholecystecomy; africa; afrique; laparoscopie; chirurgie laparoscopique; WBI; Wallonie Bruxelles; coelioscopie
Abstract :
[en] For many reasons, laparoscopic surgery has been performed worldwide. Due to logistical constraints its first steps occurred in Lubumbashi only in 2008. The aim of this presentation was to report authors' ten-month experience of laparoscopic surgery at Lubumbashi Don Bosco Missionary Hospital (LDBMH): problems encountered and preliminary results. The study was a transsectional descriptive work with a convenient sampling. It only took in account patients with abdominal surgical condition who consented to undergo laparoscopic surgery and when logistical constraints of the procedure were found. Independent variables were patients' demographic parameters, staff, equipments and consumable. Dependent parameters included surgical abdominal diseases, intra-operative circumstances and postoperative short term mortality and morbidity. Between 1(st)April 2009 and 28(th) February 2010, 75 patients underwent laparoscopic surgery at the LDBMH making 1.5% of all abdominal surgical activities performed at this institution. The most performed procedure was appendicectomy for acute appendicitis (64%) followed by exploratory laparoscopy for various abdominal chronic pain (9.3%), adhesiolysis for repeated periods of subacute intestinal obstruction in previously laparotomised patients (9.3%), laparoscopic cholecystectomy for post acute cholecystitis on gall stone (5.3%) and partial colectomy for symptomatic redundant sigmoid colon (2.7%). There were 4% of conversion to laparotomy. Laparoscopic surgery consumed more time than laparotomy, mostly when dealing with appendicitis. However, postoperatively, patients did quite well. There was no death in this series. Nursing care was minimal with early discharge. These results are encouraging to pursue laparoscopic surgery with DRC Government and NGO's supports.
Disciplines :
Surgery
Author, co-author :
Arung, Willy
Dinganga, Nathalie
Ngoie, Emmanuel
Odimba, Etienne
DETRY, Olivier  ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Chirurgie abdo, sénologique, endocrine et de transplantation
Language :
English
Title :
First steps of laparoscopic surgery in Lubumbashi: problems encountered and preliminary results.
Alternative titles :
[en] Premier pas en chirurgie laparoscopique à Lubumbashi, RDCongo: problèmes rencontrés et résultats préliminaires
Publication date :
2015
Journal title :
Pan African Medical Journal
eISSN :
1937-8688
Publisher :
African Field Epidemiology Network, Kampala, Uganda
Volume :
21
Pages :
210
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Available on ORBi :
since 06 May 2016

Statistics


Number of views
53 (6 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
94 (2 by ULiège)

Scopus citations®
 
2
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
1
OpenCitations
 
3

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi