» Articles » PMID: 36842955

Direct Trocar Insertion Vs. Veress Needle Technique in Laparoscopic Surgeries. A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Overview
Journal J Visc Surg
Date 2023 Feb 26
PMID 36842955
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Aim: To compare the safety and efficacy between Veress needle insertion and direct trocar insertion in laparoscopic surgeries.

Methods: Relevant clinical trials were retrieved from major databases; Web of Science, Cochrane CENTRAL, PubMed, and SCOPUS. The following outcomes were pooled for analysis: failed entry, extraperitoneal insufflation, vascular lesion, omental lesion and visceral lesion, site bleeding, reintervention, subcutaneous emphysema, solid organ lesion, and infection of the trocar site. A fixed-effects model was used to analyze homogeneous outcomes, whereas random-effects models were used to analyze heterogeneous outcomes.

Results: We included a total of twelve clinical trials. The pooled analysis showed that the Veress needle was accompanied by a significant increase in the incidences of extraperitoneal insufflation (RR = 0.204; 95% Cl [0.136, 0.307], P=0.001), omental lesion (RR=0.444 95% Cl [0.239, 0.825], P=0.01), and failed entry (RR=0.169 95% Cl [0.101, 0.284], P=0.001). There is no significant difference between both cohort regarding the vascular lesion (RR=0.847 95% Cl [0.259, 2.777), P=0.7), infection of the trocar site (RR=0.583 95%Cl [0.106, 3.216], P=0.5, and visceral lesion (RR=1.308 95% Cl [0.314, 5.438], P=0.7.

Conclusion: The DTI was accompanied by a significantly lower incidence of complications such as extraperitoneal insufflation, failed entry, omental lesion, and subcutaneous emphysema. On the other hand, both cohorts showed similar results regarding; vascular lesions, visceral lesions, reintervention, site bleeding, and solid organ lesion.

Citing Articles

Safety of Laparoscopic Entry Points in Patients With a History of Abdominal Surgery: A Research Article.

Guven E, Dura M, Akturk H, Guraslan H Cureus. 2023; 15(10):e47244.

PMID: 38022249 PMC: 10656110. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.47244.


Abdominal access in laparoscopic surgery of obese patients: a novel abdominal access technique.

Polat M, Incebiyik A, Tammo O Ann Saudi Med. 2023; 43(4):236-242.

PMID: 37554021 PMC: 10716838. DOI: 10.5144/0256-4947.2023.236.