Minimally invasive surgery in the concept of enhanced recovery after surgery.
10.3760/cma.j.cn441530-20220323-00113
- Author:
Chuang Qi CHEN
1
Author Information
1. Department of Colorectal Surgery, Gastrointestinal Surgery Center, the First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510080, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Enhanced Recovery After Surgery;
Humans;
Length of Stay;
Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures/methods*;
Postoperative Complications/etiology*;
Postoperative Period
- From:
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
2022;25(7):632-635
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) and minimally invasive surgery are two important development directions of modern surgery in the 21st century. They provide new clinical treatment methods and theoretical basis for the rapid recovery of surgical patients and more rational utilization of medical resources. They are two hot topics in clinical research and academic exchange of surgery-related subjects, and promote the rapid development and clinical application of surgery. ERAS covers a range of preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative optimization measures, of which minimally invasive surgery is an important part of intraoperative optimization. The quality of surgery, especially minimally invasive surgery, plays a key role in postoperative recovery, which is the most important one of all ERAS measures. With good surgical quality and no postoperative complications, patients will recover quickly. Therefore, minimally invasive surgery plays a central role in the ERAS concept. The combination of ERAS with minimally invasive surgery is not only safe and feasible, but is also better than these two clinical therapies alone for postoperative recovery, and improves short-term and long-term outcome and accelerates the recovery of patients. For surgical diseases treated with minimally invasive surgery as far as possible, using the ERAS management for patients will result in reduced traumatic stress, better surgical tolerance, less postoperative pain, smaller incision, earlier ambulation, better organ function, and less morbidity of complications. In short, ERAS and minimally invasive surgery complement and promote each other. As two outstanding achievements of modern medicine, they are clinical treatments that provide sufficient theoretical basis for rapid recovery of patients and open a new chapter for the development of modern surgery.