Era of enhanced recovery after surgery and robotic gastric cancer surgery.
- Author:
Yanbing ZHOU
1
Author Information
1. Department of General Surgery, Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, Qingdao 266003, China. zhouyanbing999@aliyun.com.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Anesthesia, Epidural;
Anesthesia, Local;
Convalescence;
Critical Pathways;
Enteral Nutrition;
Gastrectomy;
instrumentation;
methods;
rehabilitation;
Humans;
Length of Stay;
Pain Management;
Patient Education as Topic;
Postoperative Care;
methods;
standards;
Postoperative Complications;
prevention & control;
Preoperative Care;
Quality of Life;
Recovery of Function;
Robotic Surgical Procedures;
rehabilitation;
Stomach Neoplasms;
surgery
- From:
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
2017;20(5):495-499
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) has been rapidly developing by combining several techniques with evidence-based adjustments, including preoperative education, preoperative carbohydrate loading, epidural or regional anesthesia, early initiation of enteral nutrition, ambulation and multi-modal pain management. The core part of ERAS is to reduce and reverse surgical stress and therefore greatly improve clinical outcome. Under the guidance of ERAS, perioperative management of robotic gastric cancer operation should follow the basic principles of ERAS and clinical pathway to maximize the advantages of the robotic surgery. ERAS protocol is safe and feasible for patients undergoing robotic radical gastrectomy and it can reduce surgical stress, shorten hospital stay, improve quality of life and does not increase complications, whose mechanism may be associated with the reduction of inflammation and insulin resistance, the decrease of resting energy exposure, and the protection of mitochondria function. It is worth emphasizing that it is very important to fully understand the changes of pathophysiology during perioperative period, to strictly implement the ERAS pathway based on optimized evidence-based medicine, to cooperate closely with the multidisciplinary team, to observe and manage the postoperative complications dynamically by systemic classification. The improvement of ERAS program on the outcome of patients should be summarized regularly and the new interventional strategies should be evaluated further according to the international standard.