Morcellation
Howdy, folks. I've been kind of disappeared for a while. I was terribly depressed for a while, but seem to be coming out of it. Made it through my one year scans--no evidence of recurrence or metastases. Yay!
Anyhow, I've been reading with interest the news about the recommendations not to use morcellation for hysterctomies, and the recall today by J&J/Ethicon of their morcellators.
I know that my kidney, adrenal gland, etc., were morcellated. Any thoughts on there being a risk of cancer cells "seeding" after a nephrectomy involving morcellation?
Appreciate your feedback.
Comments
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LapSac
This is from a review article on LN using morcellation. It’s from 2002 so I would imagine techniques were even better when you had it done.
“If the specimen is to be morcellated, a LapSac™ (Cook Urological, Inc., Spencer, IN), fabricated from a double layer of plastic and nondistensible nylon, must be used. This device has been shown to withstand morcellation and remain impermeable to bacteria and tumor cells. During LRN, attempts should be made to perform a wide en bloc dissection to ensure an adequate surgical margin. The field is draped prior to morcellation and all potentially cancerous tissue entrapped in an impermeable sac prior to extraction from a trocar site”
So while I’m no expert, I would think you’re safe because the sac prevented any tissue from leaving it and being spread around.
Here’s the original source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475958/
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Thank you.APny said:LapSac
This is from a review article on LN using morcellation. It’s from 2002 so I would imagine techniques were even better when you had it done.
“If the specimen is to be morcellated, a LapSac™ (Cook Urological, Inc., Spencer, IN), fabricated from a double layer of plastic and nondistensible nylon, must be used. This device has been shown to withstand morcellation and remain impermeable to bacteria and tumor cells. During LRN, attempts should be made to perform a wide en bloc dissection to ensure an adequate surgical margin. The field is draped prior to morcellation and all potentially cancerous tissue entrapped in an impermeable sac prior to extraction from a trocar site”
So while I’m no expert, I would think you’re safe because the sac prevented any tissue from leaving it and being spread around.
Here’s the original source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475958/
Thanks, APny. That is very comforting. I had an excellent surgeon and I'm certain he did everything by the book.
It's a little unnerving nonetheless.
Nothing worse than being a hypochondriac cancer survivor. B-)
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"Nothing worse than being aanmazon said:Thank you.
Thanks, APny. That is very comforting. I had an excellent surgeon and I'm certain he did everything by the book.
It's a little unnerving nonetheless.
Nothing worse than being a hypochondriac cancer survivor. B-)
"Nothing worse than being a hypochondriac cancer survivor."
I can totally related to that, lol
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