Desmond H. Birkett
Lahey Hospital & Medical Center
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Critical Care Medicine | 1992
Marisa A. Montecalvo; Kathleen A. Steger; Harrison W. Farber; Bernard F. Smith; Richard C. Dennis; Garry F. Fitzpatrick; Sidney D. Pollack; Tina Z. Korsberg; Desmond H. Birkett; Erwin F. Hirsch; Donald E. Craven
ObjectiveTo compare nutritional status, gastric colonization, and rates of nosocomial pneumonia in ICU patients randomized to gastric tube feeding vs. patients fed by an endoscopically placed jejunal tube. DesignRandomized, prospective study. SettingMedical and surgical ICUs at Boston City Hospital; surgical ICU at University Hospital. PatientsOf the 38 study patients, 19 were randomized to gastric tube feeding and 19 were randomized to an endoscopically placed jejunal tube. The two groups were similar in age, sex, race, underlying disease, and type of surgery. ResultsThe two patient groups were similar in number of days fed, duration of ICU stay, duration of mechanical ventilation, days of antibiotic therapy, and days with fever. Compared with the gastric group, the jejunal group had more patients with circulatory shock on admission (79% vs. 68.4%), higher admission Acute Physiology Score (24.0 vs. 21.7), and fewer patients with pneumonia at randomization (26.3% vs. 31.6%). The jejunal group received a significantly higher percentage of their daily goal caloric intake (p = .05), and had greater increases in serum prealbumin concentrations (p <.05) than the patients with gastric tube feeding. Although the jejunal tube group had more days of diarrhea (3.3 ±PT 6.6 vs. 1.8 ±PT 2.9), this difference was not statistically significant. Nosocomial pneumonia was diagnosed clinically in two (10.5%) patients in the gastric tube group and in no patients in the jejunal tube group. ConclusionsPatients fed by jejunal tube received a significantly higher proportion of their daily goal caloric intake, had a significantly greater increase in serum prealbumin concentrations, and had a lower rate of pneumonia than patients fed by continuous gastric tube feeding.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2005
Lee L. Swanstrom; Richard A. Kozarek; Pankaj J. Pasricha; Steven Gross; Desmond H. Birkett; Per Ola Park; Vahid Saadat; Richard C. Ewers; Paul Swain
Flexible endoscope-based endoluminal and transgastric surgery for cholecystectomy, appendectomy, bariatric, and antireflux procedures show promise as a less invasive form of surgery. Current endoscopes and instruments are inadequate to perform such complex surgeries for a variety of reasons: they are too flexible and are insufficient to provide robust grasping and anatomic retraction. The lack of support for a retroflexed endoscope in the peritoneal cavity makes it hard to reach remote structures and makes vigorous retraction of tissues and organs difficult. There is also a need for multiple channels in scopes to allow use of several instruments and to provide traction/countertraction. Finally, secure means of tissue approximation are critical. The aim was to develop and test a new articulating flexible endoscopic system for endoluminal and transgastric endosurgery. A multidisciplinary group of gastrointestinal physicians and surgeons worked with medical device engineers to develop new devices and instruments. Needs assessments and design parameters were developed by consensus. Prototype devices were tested using inanimate models until usable devices were arrived at. The devices were tested in nonsurvival pigs and dogs. The devices were accessed through an incision in the wall of the stomach and manipulated in the peritoneal cavity to accomplish four different tasks: right upper quadrant wedge liver biopsy, right lower quadrant cecal retraction, left lower quadrant running small bowel, and left lower quadrant exposure of esophageal hiatus. In another three pigs, transgastric cholecystectomy was attempted. The positions of the device, camera, and endosurgical instruments, with and without ShapeLock technology, were recorded using laparoscopy and endoscopy and procedure times and success rates were measured. Instrument design parameters and their engineering solutions are described. Flexible multilumen guides which could be locked in position, including a prototype which allowed triangulation, were constructed. Features of the 18-mm devices include multidirectional mid body and/or tip angulation, two 5.5-mm accessory channels allowing the use of large (5-mm) flexible endosurgical instruments, as well as a 4-mm channel for an ultraslim prototype video endoscope (Pentax 4 mm). Using the resulting devices, the four designated transgastric procedures were performed in anesthetized animals. One hundred percent of the transgastric endosurgical procedures were accomplished with the exception of a 50% success for hiatal exposure, a 90% success rate for wedge liver biopsy, and a 33.3% success rate for cholecystectomy. A new endosurgical multilumen device and advanced instrumentation allowed effective transgastric exploration and procedures in the abdominal cavity including retraction of the liver and stomach to allow exposure of the gallbladder, retraction of the cecum, manipulation of the small bowel, and exposure of the esophageal hiatus. This technology may serve as the needed platform for transgastric cholecystectomy, gastric reduction, fundoplication, hiatus hernia repair, or other advanced endosurgical procedures.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2002
Y. T. Wong; David M. Brams; L. Munson; L. Sanders; Frederick W. Heiss; Michael P Chase; Desmond H. Birkett
Background: Gastric outlet obstruction in patients with pancreatic cancer has a grim prognosis. Open surgical bypass is associated with high morbidity, whereas endoscopic duodenal stenting appears to provide better palliation. Methods: We reviewed the medical records of patients with gastric outlet obstruction secondary to pancreatic carcinoma who were admitted to our clinic between 1 October 1988, and 30 September 1998. The data included stage of disease, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class, surgical interventions, complications, and survival. Results: A total of 250 patients with pancreatic cancer were identified. Twenty-five of them (10%) had gastric outlet obstruction. Of these 25, 17 were treated with gastrojejunostomy, six had duodenal stenting (Wallstent), and two were resectable. There was no significant difference between the gastrojejunostomy group and the duodenal stenting group in ASA class or stage of disease. For the gastrojejunostomy group, median survival was 64 days (range, 15-167) and postoperative stay in hospital was 15 days (range, 8-39). For the duodenal stenting group, median survival was 110.5 days (range, 42-212) and postoperative stay was 4 days (range, 2-6). Ten patients (58.8%) in the gastrojejunostomy group had delayed gastric emptying. All of the patients in the duodenal stenting group were able to tolerate a soft diet the day after stent placement. Thirty-day mortality in the gastrojejunostomy group was 17.64%; in the duodenal stenting group, it was 0. Conclusion: In pancreatic carcinoma patients with gastric outlet obstruction, duodenal stenting results in an earlier discharge from hospital and possibly improved survival.
Current Surgery | 2003
Lev Khitin; Robert E. Roses; Desmond H. Birkett
Gastric cancer in the gastric stump after a Bilroth II subtotal gastrectomy is a well-recognized entity. However, gastric cancer in the bypassed gastric remnant after a gastric bypass operation for morbid obesity has not been well described, and only 2 such cases have been reported in the English literature. This case report presents a patient who developed gastric cancer in the defunctionalized, bypassed stomach 22 years after undergoing an open gastric bypass with a Roux-en-Y gastro-jejunostomy for morbid obesity. The problems of monitoring the defunctionalized bypassed stomach after gastric stapling and gastro-jejunostomy are discussed.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 1994
Desmond H. Birkett; Leon G. Josephs; J. Este-McDonald
This study was set up to compare three-dimensional imaging of a new three-dimensional laparoscope with two-dimensional imaging in the inanimate and clinical settings. In the clinical setting the laparoscope was used in a total of 50 different laparoscopic operations. It provided excellent depth perception, definition, and resolution. The relationships of structures were more easily defined, and instrument manipulation was easier, doing away with the need for “touch and feel” to determine instrument position. Three-D imaging made cannulation of the cystic duct for cholangiography or with a flexible choledochoscope easier.In the inanimate setting basic simple tasks took the same time in 2-D as in 3-D, whereas a more complicated procedure of passing a needle and suture through a series of hoops was 25% faster when performed in 3-D compared to 2-D. Three-D imaging may reduce operative time for laparoscopic procedures, particularly the more complicated operations.
Abdominal Imaging | 1978
S. G. Gerzof; A. H. Robbins; Desmond H. Birkett
Computed tomography (CT) is effective in demonstrating abdominal abscesses and their relation to surrounding structures. The CT signs of abscess are not unlike those demonstrable radiographically and include an abnormal mass, obliteration and displacement of surrounding organs, inappropriate gas, and peripheral enhancement after intravenous contrast. Axial imaging permits selection of safe approaches through which percutaneous needle aspiration can be performed for diagnosis and therapy. When techniques similar to those employed in angiography are used, a catheter can be inserted, the abscess evacuated, and the catheter left in place as a drain. Combined with intravenous antibiotics, this method of abscess drainage has been successful in curing abscesses without surgery. Representative examples are shown.
Surgical Clinics of North America | 2008
Jennifer E. Verbesey; Desmond H. Birkett
Laparoscopic common bile duct exploration has a high success rate, with rates reported from 83% to 96% in recent years. The morbidity rate has been reported to be approximately 10% Mortality rates are very low, at less than 1%.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2008
Daniel M. Herron; Desmond H. Birkett; Christopher C. Thompson; Marc Bessler; Lee L. Swanstrom
BackgroundWeight regain after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass may be caused by pouch enlargement or dilatation of the gastrojejunostomy (stoma). In order to avoid the substantial morbidity of revisional bariatric surgery, investigators have recently demonstrated the feasibility of reducing stoma diameter using transoral endoscopic suturing techniques. Our aim was to demonstrate the feasibility of performing both pouch and stomal reduction using transoral endoscopically placed tissue anchors in an ex vivo and acute animate model.MethodsPart I: We created an ex vivo model of a dilated gastric pouch and stoma using four explanted porcine stomachs. The stomach was divided to create an upper pouch of approx. 100 ml volume, which was reconnected to the lower portion of the stomach (gastric remnant) via an anastomosis of 18 to 20 mm diameter. Endoscopically placed anchors were then used to create plications of the stoma and reduce its diameter. In two stomachs, anchor plications were also used to decrease pouch volume. Pouch volumes and stoma diameters were measured pre- and post-procedure. Part II: A similar experimental model was created in vivo using three pigs. Anchors were placed in the stoma and pouch. The animals were immediately sacrificed and similar measurements were obtained.ResultsIn the ex vivo model, stoma diameter was successfully reduced in all four stomachs by a mean of 8 mm (41%). This represented a mean decrease in cross-sectional area of 65%. Pouch volume was reduced by a mean of 28 ml (30%) in two stomachs. Stomal plications were successfully placed in two of the live animals, with a mean stoma diameter reduction of 11.5 mm (53%). Feasibility of pouch reduction using plicating anchors was confirmed.ConclusionsThis is the first study to demonstrate the feasibility of using endoscopically placed tissue anchors to reduce both stoma diameter and pouch volume. This technique may ultimately be clinically useful in treating weight regain after gastric bypass surgery.
American Journal of Surgery | 1981
Ronald L. Nath; Joseph C. Sequeira; A. Frank Weitzman; Desmond H. Birkett; Lester F. Williams
The management of patients with lower gastrointestinal bleeding requires a systematic approach based on defined diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Although in 80 percent of patients bleeding will stop spontaneously, 25 percent will have rebleeding and 50 percent of those with rebleeding will bleed again. Angiography documents specific bleeding sites but raises questions related to the incidence, site and frequency of bleeding, as well as the necessity of demonstrating extravasation. We reviewed 49 arteriograms performed for lower gastrointestinal bleeding. We conclude from our findings that angiography identifies a presumptive cause of bleeding in 49 percent of patients; angiography identified the site of bleeding in 86 percent of the patients with active bleeding, thus allowing segmental colectomy. We believe that documentation of angiodysplasia in a patient with lower gastrointestinal bleeding is presumptive evidence for the site of bleeding. Angiography is useful and worthwhile in the work-up of patients with lower gastrointestinal bleeding in an attempt to plan localized, definitive resection, and this may lead to a lower mortality rate.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2004
Y. T. Wong; Paresh C. Shah; Desmond H. Birkett; David M. Brams
BackgroundCarbon dioxide (CO2) is the most common gas used for insufflation in laparoscopy, but its effects on peritoneal physiology are poorly understood. This study looks at the changes in peritoneal and bowel serosal pH during CO2 pneumoperitoneum, and whether heating and humidification with or without bicarbonate alters the outcomes.MethodsTwenty-one pigs divided into four groups as follows: (1) standard (STD) laparoscopy (n = 5); (2) heated and humidified (HH) laparoscopy (n = 6); (3) heated and humidified with bicarbonate (HHBI) laparoscopy (n = 5); and (4) laparotomy (n = 5). Peritoneal pH, bowel serosal pH, and arterial blood gas (ABG) were obtained at 15-min intervals for 3 h.ResultsSevere peritoneal acidosis (pH range 6.59–6.74) was observed in all laparoscopy groups, and this was unaltered by heating and humidification or the addition of bicarbonate. Bowel serosal acidosis was observed in all laparoscopy groups with onset of pneumoperitoneum, but it recovered after 45 minutes. No significant changes in peritoneal or bowel serosal pH were observed in the laparotomy group.ConclusionCO2 pneumoperitoneum resulted in severe peritoneal acidosis that was unaltered by heating and humidification with or without bicarbonate. Alteration in peritoneal pH may conceivably be responsible for providing an environment favorable for tumor-cell implantation during laparoscopy.