Author:
Ge Nan,Wang Zhiguo,Sun Siyu,Wang Sheng,Wang Guoxin,Sun Shiwei,Feng Linlin,Yang Fei,Ma Wenzhuang,Wang Shupeng,Liu Xiang,Guo Jintao,Liu Wen
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) has become the “gold standard” for treating symptomatic gallstones. Innovative methods, such as a scarless therapeutic procedure through a natural orifice are being introduced, and include transgastric or transcolonic endoscopic cholecystectomy. However, before clinical implementation, instruments still need modification, and a more convenient treatment is still needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of endoscopic internal gallbladder therapy such as cholecystolithotomy in an animal survival model.
Methods
Four pigs underwent endoscopic-ultrasound (EUS)-guided cholecystogastrostomy and the placement of a novel covered mental stent. Four weeks later the stents were removed and an endoscope was advanced into the gallbladder via the fistula, and cholecystolithotomy was performed. Two weeks later the pigs were sacrificed, and the healing of the fistulas was assessed.
Results
EUS-guided cholecystogastrostomy with mental stent deployment was successfully performed in all the animals. Four weeks after the procedure, the fistulas had formed and all the stents were removed. Endoscopic cholecystolithotomy was performed through each fistula. All the animals survived until they were sacrificed 2 weeks later. The fistulas were found to be completely healed.
Conclusions
This study reports the first endoscopic transmural cholecystolithotomy after placement of a novel mental stent in an animal survival model.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Gastroenterology,General Medicine
Cited by
7 articles.
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