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Equine veterinary journal2007; 39(3); 210-214; doi: 10.2746/042516407x17116522

Electrosurgery as the sole means of haemostasis during the laparoscopic removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries in mares: a report of 55 cases.

Abstract: There is little published clinical evidence on the use of a laparoscopic approach for the removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries in standing mares. Objective: To show the orders of success and complication rates that can be expected if pathologically enlarged ovaries are removed from standing, sedated mares under laparoscopic guidance using only electrosurgical means of haemostasis. Methods: A retrospective analysis was made of 55 mares in which the removal of an enlarged ovary was attempted by applying a standard laparoscopic procedure for routine ovariectomy in standing mares including a reliance solely on one of 2 types of electrosurgical bipolar forceps with an integrated guillotine for haemostasis and transection of the ovarian pedicle. The outcomes and complications encountered were recorded. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify the risk of any complications associated with the size of the ovary removed and the instrument used. Results: In 54 of the 55 mares, the surgery was successfully accomplished by the planned approach. In one mare there was significant intraoperative haemorrhage and this necessitated the additional use of a prosthetic haemostatic device. The only other complications encountered were post operative abdominal discomfort (n = 9), delayed incisional wound healing (n = 6) and iatrogenic uterine puncture (n = 2). One mare developed a rectal tear, but not as a direct complication of the surgical procedure. None of these prevented a long-term successful outcome. Conclusions: The removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries (up to 30 cm diameter) from mares under standing sedation can be accomplished predictably and safely by applying the standard laparoscopic approach that is established for routine laparoscopic ovariectomy, including a reliance solely on endoscopic electrosurgery instruments for haemostasis of the ovarian pedicle. Conclusions: This study shows that the simple standing laparoscopic technique now favoured for routine ovariectomy can be used safely and reliably for the removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries. This promises to be of significant clinical advantage to mares so affected.
Publication Date: 2007-05-25 PubMed ID: 17520970DOI: 10.2746/042516407x17116522Google Scholar: Lookup
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  • Journal Article

Summary

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The research examines the success and complication rates of using electrosurgery as the primary means of controlling bleeding (haemostasis) during the laparoscopic removal of abnormally enlarged ovaries in sedated, standing female horses (mares). The study also evaluates how the size of the ovary and the instrument used impacts these outcomes.

Objective and Methodology

The goal of the study was to assess the feasibility and safety of laparoscopic removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries in mares using only electrosurgical means of haemostasis. Data was retrospectively analyzed from 55 cases where an attempt was made to remove an enlarged ovary via laparoscopy. The laparoscopic process included relying on one of two types of electrosurgical bipolar forceps with an integrated guillotine for haemostasis and transection of the ovarian pedicle.

  • The outcomes and complications encountered were recorded.
  • A logistic regression analysis was performed to identify if the size of the ovary removed and the instrument used raised the risk of complications.

Results

  • Successful surgery was reported in 54 out of 55 cases.
  • In one mare, there was significant intraoperative haemorrhage necessitating the use of additional prosthetic haemostatic device.
  • Other complications reported included postoperative abdominal discomfort (n=9), delayed incisional wound healing (n=6), and iatrogenic uterine puncture (n=2). One mare had a rectal tear, which was not a direct outcome of the surgical process.
  • Regardless of complications, all surgeries resulted in successful long-term outcomes.

Conclusion

The research concludes that it is safe and reliable to remove abnormally enlarged ovaries (up to 30 cm in diameter) from sedated, standing mares using standard laparoscopy and electrosurgery instruments for haemostasis of the ovarian pedicle. The benefit of electrosurgery is its ability to cut and coagulate tissue, which helps to control bleeding. This method promises to offer significant clinical advantage to mares suffering from this condition, making the surgical procedure safer, easier and potentially leading to fewer complications.

Cite This Article

APA
Lloyd D, Walmsley JP, Greet TR, Payne RJ, Newton JR, Phillips TJ. (2007). Electrosurgery as the sole means of haemostasis during the laparoscopic removal of pathologically enlarged ovaries in mares: a report of 55 cases. Equine Vet J, 39(3), 210-214. https://doi.org/10.2746/042516407x17116522

Publication

ISSN: 0425-1644
NlmUniqueID: 0173320
Country: United States
Language: English
Volume: 39
Issue: 3
Pages: 210-214

Researcher Affiliations

Lloyd, D
  • The Liphook Equine Hospital, Forest Mere, Liphook, Hampshire GU30 7JG.
Walmsley, J P
    Greet, T R C
      Payne, R J
        Newton, J R
          Phillips, T J

            MeSH Terms

            • Animals
            • Conscious Sedation / methods
            • Conscious Sedation / veterinary
            • Electrosurgery / methods
            • Electrosurgery / veterinary
            • Female
            • Homeostasis / physiology
            • Horses / surgery
            • Intraoperative Complications / epidemiology
            • Intraoperative Complications / veterinary
            • Logistic Models
            • Ovariectomy / methods
            • Ovariectomy / veterinary
            • Ovary / pathology
            • Ovary / surgery
            • Postoperative Complications / epidemiology
            • Postoperative Complications / veterinary
            • Retrospective Studies
            • Treatment Outcome

            Citations

            This article has been cited 1 times.
            1. Straticò P, Guerri G, Palozzo A, Varasano V, Petrizzi L. Current Use of Equine Laparoscopy in Urogenital Disorders: A Scoping Review of the Literature from 2000 to 2021. Vet Sci 2022 Jan 22;9(2).
              doi: 10.3390/vetsci9020041pubmed: 35202295google scholar: lookup