Abstract

Laparoscopy-assisted distal gastrectomy (LADG) has been widely accepted for the treatment for early gastric cancer. Obesity is a rapidly growing epidemic, and the number of obese patients with gastric cancer is increasing, but the impact of visceral fat (VF) accumulation on laparoscopic gastric surgery remains unknown. The aim of the present study was to determine the impact of VF accumulation on LADG. The medical charts of 30 patients who underwent LADG for early gastric cancer in our hospital between November 2000 and November 2006 were analyzed retrospectively. The patients were divided into two groups on the basis of VF accumulation measured on cross-sectional computed tomography at the level of the umbilicus. Twelve patients had high VF accumulation (> or =100 cm2) and 18 had low VF accumulation (<100 cm2). Although subcutaneous fat accumulation was not correlated with operation time or operative blood loss, VF accumulation was strongly, and significantly, correlated with both operation time and operative blood loss. The high-VF-accumulation group had a significantly longer operation time and significantly more operative blood loss than the low-VF-accumulation group. There was no significant difference in the rate of postoperative complications or conversion to open laparotomy between the two groups. There were no operative deaths or requirements for blood transfusion in either group. VF accumulation was significantly correlated with operative difficulties during LADG. Although LADG was as safe for patients with high VF accumulation as for patients with low VF accumulation, a longer operative time and more operative blood loss were observed in patients with high VF accumulation. VF accumulation appears to be a possible risk factor in LADG and should be considered when making a decision about treating early gastric cancer with LADG.

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