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Dive into the research topics where Dejan Ignjatovic is active.

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Featured researches published by Dejan Ignjatovic.


American Journal of Surgery | 2010

Can the gastrocolic trunk of Henle serve as an anatomical landmark in laparoscopic right colectomy? A postmortem anatomical study.

Dejan Ignjatovic; Milan Spasojevic; Bojan Stimec

BACKGROUND The use of the gastrocolic trunk of Henle (GTH) as a landmark has been advocated in laparoscopic right colectomy. The aim of this study was to evaluate the GTH as a possible landmark in laparoscopic right colectomy in the context of the adjacent arteries. METHODS Corrosion casting (30 specimens) and anatomic dissection were performed on formol-fixed cadavers (12 specimens). RESULTS The GTH was found in 34 specimens (81.0%). Among its closely related neighboring arterial vessels, the right colic artery was the most frequent (19 cases [55.9%]). It passed by the GTH at a mean distance of 3.6 mm. The course of the arteries in relation to the GTH was caudal and parallel in most cases (29 [85.3%]), but there was also a significant portion of crossing schemes (11.7%). CONCLUSIONS Although the GTH is a constant and conspicuous anatomic entity, it is not easily accessible, because of its tight relations to the right colon arteries. Instead, the authors advocate the use the superior right colic vein as an anatomic landmark leading to the GTH during laparoscopic right colectomy.


Techniques in Coloproctology | 2007

Vascular relationships in right colectomy for cancer: clinical implications

Dejan Ignjatovic; S. Sund; B. Stimec; R. Bergamaschi

AimsThe study aim was to provide data on pattern and length of crossing of the ileocolic artery (ICA) and right colic artery (RCA) with the superior mesenteric vein (SMV).MethodsSpecimens from 30 fresh human cadavers underwent corrosion casting. Methylacrylate was injected into the SMV and superior mesenteric artery (SMA). Length of crossing was measured with a scaleable ruler and copper wire. Values are mean (SD; range).ResultsICA was present in all specimens and crossed posterior to the SMV in 19 (63.33%) of 30 specimens. Length of crossing was 17.01 (7.84; 7.09–42.89) mm. RCA was present in 19 (63.33%) of 30 specimens. RCA crossed anterior to SMV in 16 (84.21%) of 19 specimens. Length of crossing was 20.63 (8.09; 6.3–35.7) mm.ConclusionsICA was always present, crossed posterior to SMV in 60% of specimens with a crossing length of 17 mm. RCA was present in 63% of specimens, crossed anterior to the SMV in 84% of specimens with a crossing length of 20 mm. Clinical implications include arterial length left behind with main nodes, arterial bleeding and safety of laparoscopic access.


Techniques in Coloproctology | 2004

Venous anatomy of the right colon: three-dimensional topographic mapping of the gastrocolic trunk of Henle.

Dejan Ignjatovic; B. Stimec; T. Finjord; Roberto Bergamaschi

Abstract.Background:The gastrocolic trunk of Henle has not been described in detail in context with right hemicolectomy. The aim of this study was to define the caliber, length and three-dimensional position of the gastrocolic trunk of Henle (GTH).Methods:We studied 10 fresh (<24 h) cadavers. A corrosion cast method was employed. Cold polymerized methylacrylate was injected into the superior mesenteric vein (SMV) and artery. GTH diameter, length and point of confluence with the SMV were assessed.Results:The GTH was present in all specimens originating from the confluence of the right gastroepiploic and superior-anterior pancreaticoduodenal veins. The GTH joined the SMV at an average distance of 2.2 cm (range, 1.6–3.2 cm) from the inferior pancreatic border and it coursed towards the right side in a ventral-cranial direction. The mean caliber and length of the GTH were 5.2 mm (range, 4.8–5.8 mm) and 16.1 mm (range, 10.1–20.7 mm), respectively.Conclusions:The GTH is a short, medium-sized vessel of potential clinical significance with a consistent ventral-cranial direction.


Colorectal Disease | 2015

Navigating the mesentery: a comparative pre- and per-operative visualization of the vascular anatomy

Jens-Marius Nesgaard; Bojan Stimec; Arne Bakka; Bjørn Edwin; Dejan Ignjatovic

Awareness of anatomy is critical for performing safe surgery within the root of the mesentery. Our aim was to investigate the anatomical relationship between the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) and vein (SMV) and their branches within a predefined D3 area of the right colon and to compare preoperatively established three‐dimensional (3D) mesenteric vessel anatomy from CT with that found at surgery.


American Journal of Surgery | 2010

Intra-abdominal administration of bevacizumab diminishes intra-peritoneal adhesions

Dejan Ignjatovic; Kristine Aasland; Marianne Pettersen; Stale Sund; Yin Chen; Milan Spasojevic; Jens Marius Nesgaard

AIM To determine the effect of a single dose of bevacizumab on adhesion formation in the rat cecum abrasion model. METHODS The cecum and parietal peritoneum of 38 male Wistar rats were abraded to promote adhesion formation. The rats were randomized into 2 groups: group 1 received bevacizumab (2.5 mg/kg) intraperitoneally, and group 2 received saline. On day 30 animals were killed, adhesions scored, and histopathological samples taken. RESULTS There was no wound dehiscence; there were 2 incision hernias (5.3%), 1 per group. Thirty-seven animals developed adhesions (97.4%). Adhesion grade and severity scores were significantly different between groups 1 and 2 at 2.7:1.6 (P = .018) and 3.8:2.7 (P = .007), respectively. There was no difference in adhesion square area (27.7:25.0%; P = .16), location (P = 1.00), or number (2.1:1.3; P = .06). Histopathology confirmed the statistical difference between groups (P = .049), and a highly significant correlation between results was shown (r = .758; P = .0001). CONCLUSION A single dose of intraperitoneal bevacizumab significantly reduces grade and severity of abdominal adhesions in the cecum abrasion rat model.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2011

The anatomical and surgical consequences of right colectomy for cancer

Milan Spasojevic; Bojan Stimec; Lars Bergene Grønvold; Jens-Marius Nesgaard; Bjørn Edwin; Dejan Ignjatovic

BACKGROUND: Current practice when performing right colectomy for cancer is to divide the feeding vessels for the right colon on the right side of the superior mesenteric vein. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to show that arterial stumps can be visualized through an early postoperative CT and analyze their anatomical and surgical characteristics. DESIGN: This study presents a retrospective review of prospective data. SETTINGS: The study was conducted at the Department of Surgery, Vestfold Hospital, Tonsberg, Norway. PATIENTS: Patients with leakage after a right colectomy for cancer (2003–2011) were identified through a local prospective complication registry (FileMaker Pro 9.0v3 software). INTERVENTIONS: Both preoperative and postoperative CTs were retrieved, reanalyzed, and 3-dimensionally reconstructed (Osirix v.3.0.2./Mimics v.13.1.). Patients without postoperative CTs were excluded. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The main outcomes measured were length, caliber of presumed and actual arterial stumps, and their position relative to the superior mesenteric vein. RESULTS: Eighteen patients, median age 69 (10 men) were included. All patients had postoperative CTs, and 15 patients had preoperative CTs. Median time from operation to postoperative CT was 5 days. The ileocolic artery was found in 14 (11 CT pairs) patients, and the right colic artery was found in 5 (4 pairs) patients. Actual stump lengths were 28.0 mm (SD 9.3) and 37.3 mm (SD 14.9). A significant statistical difference between presumed and actual ileocolic artery stump lengths was found (P = .002). Posterior crossing to the superior mesenteric vein was noticed in 8 of 14 ileocolic arteries and in 3 of 5 right colic arteries. There was no statistical difference in mean caliber for the preoperative and postoperative right colic artery (P = .505) and ileocolic artery (P = .474). LIMITATIONS: Difficulties when interpreting the postoperative images, due to intra-abdominal effusion, staples, edema, and altered syntopy of blood vessels, were overcome through comparison with preoperative CTs. CONCLUSION: An early postoperative CT can show arterial stumps after right colectomy for cancer. These stumps appear to be significantly longer than presumed; implying a significant improvement potential when specimen size is concerned.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2013

Lymph node distribution in the d3 area of the right mesocolon: implications for an anatomically correct cancer resection. A postmortem study.

Milan Spasojevic; Bojan Stimec; Anne Pernille H. Dyrbekk; Zvezdana Tepavcevic; Bjørn Edwin; Arne Bakka; Dejan Ignjatovic

BACKGROUND: Data on lymph node distribution in the right colon D3 area are scarce, especially for nodes posterior to the superior mesenteric vessels. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine whether nodes exist posterior to the superior mesenteric vessels and if arterial crossing patterns affect node distribution. DESIGN: This is an anatomical postmortem study. SETTINGS: This study was conducted at the following institutions: Department of Gastrointestinal surgery/Pathology, Vestfold Hospital Trust, Norway; Institute for Pathology, University of Belgrade, Serbia; and Anatomy Sector, University of Geneva, Switzerland. PATIENTS: Fresh human cadavers were selected to undergo autopsy. INTERVENTION: A predefined D3 area was removed from cadavers, fixed in formaldehyde, divided into 3 vertical compartments with regard to the superior mesenteric vessels. Vertical compartments were further divided into 8 compartments. Millimeter slices were analyzed at histology. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Lymph nodes ≥1 mm were counted in each compartment. RESULTS: Twenty-six cadavers (14 men), median age 76 years, were included. Mean node number per cadaver was 15.9 ± 7.4. Lateral, anterior, and posterior vertical compartments contained median 5.5 (1–11), 5 (2–21), and 5 (0–11) nodes. The effect of the ileocolic artery crossing pattern on node number in the posterior vertical compartment was p = 0.020. Anterior/posterior ileocolic artery compartments contained nodes in 58% and 85% cadavers with median of 1(0–7) and 2(0–5). These compartments showed a significant difference in node numbers depending on the ileocolic artery crossing pattern, p < 0.001 (posterior crossing) and p < 0.001 (anterior crossing). The middle colic artery compartment contained nodes in all cadavers with a median of 2 (1–4). The association between volume and total number of nodes in the D3 area was statistically significant, p < 0.001. LIMITATIONS: Nodes posterior to the superior mesenteric vessels do not necessarily have clinical relevance. CONCLUSION: Anatomically correct D3 resection implies posterior vertical compartment removal with posterior ileocolic artery crossing. Addition of the lateral vertical compartment to routine right colectomy has an improvement potential of 5 to 6 nodes.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2000

More than two structures in Calot's triangle

Roberto Bergamaschi; Dejan Ignjatovic

AbstractBackground: Large laparoscopic cholecystectomy series often fail to report the rate at which a third structure is encountered in Calots triangle. Methods: During a 6-month period, the liver and hepatoduodenal ligament of 90 consecutive human cadavers underwent corrosion casting (n= 50), postmortem arteriography (n= 20), and postmortem cholangiography (n= 20). Results: Third structures within Calots triangle were arteries (0.6–5.7 mm diameter) in 36.2% (early division of the right hepatic artery, 8.6%; caterpillar hump right hepatic artery, 12.9%; liver branch of the cystic artery, 10%; double cystic arteries, 5.7%), bile ducts (0.3–1.6 mm diameter) in 5.7% (small-caliber sectoral ducts, 1.4%; right posterior hepatic ducts, 4.3%), and veins (0.9–1.6 mm diameter) merging with the portal vein in 4% of the specimens. Conclusion: Knowledge of the aforementioned anatomy is critical to surgeons facing more than two structures within Calots triangle during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.


Surgical Laparoscopy Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques | 1999

Anatomic rationale for arterial bleeding from the liver bed during and/or after laparoscopic cholecystectomy: a postmortem study.

Roberto Bergamaschi; Dejan Ignjatovic

The aim of this study was to establish an anatomic rationale for liver bed arterial bleeding during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Fifty consecutive human cadavers were dissected. A corrosion cast method was used. Six anastomotic branches (12%) of the cystic artery to the right or left hepatic artery ran underneath the gallbladder serosa surface and entered liver parenchyma after crossing the medial or lateral edge of the liver fossa without passing through the areolar tissue of the liver bed. Their mean length was 18.3 mm (range 4-60), and the mean diameter was 0.38 mm (range 0.2-0.8). Two cystic arteries that ascended in the midline between the gallbladder and liver bed were identified in 50 (4%) casts. Their lengths were 16 and 18 mm, and their diameters were 1.9 and 2.2 mm. Five and seven branches encircling the gallbladder arose radially. These two arterial branching patterns can cause arterial bleeding from the liver bed during and/or after laparoscopic cholecystectomy.


Surgical Laparoscopy Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques | 2012

Single-incision laparoscopic versus conventional laparoscopic ventral hernia repair: a comparison of short-term surgical results.

Lars Bergene Grønvold; Milan Spasojevic; Jens-Marius Nesgaard; Dejan Ignjatovic

Aim: To demonstrate the feasibility of single-port incisional hernia repair, quantify incision size, and compare results of patients operated by standard laparoscopy (SL) with those operated by the single-port technique [laparoendoscopic single-site surgery (LESS)]. Methods: Prospective data collected on patients operated from March 2008 to June 2010. Indication for surgery was incisional hernia >3 cm. There were no selection criteria for the enrollment of patients or the operative technique used. Results: Thirty-four patients were operated (18 women and 16 men): 15 with LESS and 19 with SL. There was no difference for age, body mass index, ASA scores, or number of previous surgical procedures. LESS patients had slightly larger (82±54 vs. 64±34 mm) and more numerous hernias: 3 (1 to 7) versus 1 (1 to 3). Adhesion grades, severity scores, and operating times (78.2 SD±31.2 vs. 73.5 SD±25.4 min, P=0.76) did not differ between the groups. The mean fascia incision size in LESS was digitally measured as 12.93±2.01 mm. The hospital stay was a median of 1 day in both groups. There was 1 conversion in the SL group. The median follow-up time was 26 months (range, 25 to 31 mo) for LESS and 34 months (range, 31 to 42 mo) for SL. Complications: There were 2 seromas and 1 hematoma in the LESS group. In the SL group, there were 2 small-bowel injuries and 2 seromas. There were no recurrences in the SL group, 1 in LESS, and no port-site hernia so far. Conclusions: LESS incisional hernia repair through 1 minimal fascia incision is feasible. Early results do not indicate a longer operation time, higher complication, or higher recurrence rates.

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Bjørn Edwin

Oslo University Hospital

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Roberto Bergamaschi

State University of New York System

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