1.Comparison of different kinds of combination of laparoscopic operation in treatment of acute appendicitis complicated with gallbladder stones
Hai XIANG ; Binggai XIANG ; Zhenliang LIN ; Zhangcheng ZHAO ; Jiangtao WEN
China Journal of Endoscopy 2017;23(1):65-69
Objective To investigate the clinical effects differences of three-port and single-port invasively combination laparoscopic cholecystectomy and appendectomy in the treatment of acute appendicitis complicated with gallbladder stone. Methods 110 patients with acute appendicitis complicated with gallbladder stones from August 2012 to August 2015 were randomly divided into control group (55 patients) with three-port laparoscopic operation and observation group (55 patients) with single-port laparoscopic operation;and the clinical indexes for operation related, operation overall satisfaction score of Brown, the VAS score of depression and anxiety before and after operation and postoperative complications of both groups were compared. Results The incision length of observation group was significantly shorter than control group (P< 0.05). The operative time of observation group was significantly longer than control group (P < 0.05). The operation overall satisfaction of Brown of observation group was significantly higher than control group (P < 0.05). The VAS score of depression and anxiety after operation of observation group was significantly better than control group and before operation (P<0.05). There was no signiifcant difference in the incidence of postoperative complications between 2 groups (P < 0.05). Conclusion Compared with three-port laparoscopic operation, single-port invasively combination laparoscopic cholecystectomy and appendectomy in the treatment of acute appendicitis complicated with gallbladder stone can efifciently decrease the incision length, improve the aesthetic degree and postoperative negative emotions and not lead to increased risk of postoperative complications.
2.Feasibility of deep learning for renal artery detection in laparoscopic video
Xin ZHAO ; Zhangcheng LIAO ; Xu WANG ; Lin MA ; Jingmin ZHOU ; Hua FAN ; Yushi ZHANG ; Weifeng XU ; Zhigang JI ; Hanzhong LI ; Surong HUA ; Jiayi LI ; Jiaquan ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Urology 2022;43(10):751-757
Objective:To explore the feasibility of deep learning technology for renal artery recognition in retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal surgery videos.Methods:From January 2020 to July 2021, the video data of 87 cases of laparoscopic retroperitoneal nephrectomy, including radical nephrectomy, partial nephrectomy, and hemiurorectomy, were retrospectively analyzed. Two urological surgeons screened video clips containing renal arteries. After frame extraction, annotation, review, and proofreading, the labeled targets were divided into training set and test set by the random number table in a ratio of 4∶1. The training set was used to train the neural network model. The test set was used to test the ability of the neural network to identify the renal artery in scenes with different difficulties, which was uniformly transmitted to the YOLOv3 convolutional neural network model for training. According to the opinion of two senior doctors, the test set was divided into high, medium, and low discrimination of renal artery and surrounding tissue. High identification means a clean renal artery and a large exposed area. For middle recognition degree, the renal artery had a certain degree of blood immersion, and the exposed area was medium. Low identification means that the exposed area of the renal artery was small, often located at the edge of the lens, and the blood immersion was severe, which may lead to lens blurring. In the surgical video, the annotator annotated the renal artery truth box frame by frame. After normalization and preprocessing, all images were input into the neural network model for training. The neural network output the renal artery prediction box, and if the overlap ratio (IOU) with the true value box was higher than the set threshold, it was judged that the prediction was correct. The neural network test results of the test set were recorded, and the sensitivity and accuracy were calculated according to IOU.Results:In the training set, 1 149 targets of 13 videos had high recognition degree, 1 891 targets of 17 videos had medium recognition degree, and 349 targets of 18 videos had low recognition degree. In the test set, 267 targets in 9 videos had high recognition degree, 519 targets in 11 videos had medium recognition degree, and 349 targets in 18 videos had low recognition degree. When the IOU threshold was 0.1, the sensitivity and accuracy were 52.78% and 82.50%, respectively. When the IOU threshold was 0.5, the sensitivity and accuracy were 37.80% and 59.10%, respectively. When the IOU threshold was 0.1, the sensitivity and accuracy of high, medium and low recognition groups were 89.14% and 87.82%, 45.86% and 78.03%, 32.95%, and 76.67%, respectively. The frame rate of the YOLOv3 algorithm in real-time surgery video was ≥15 frames/second. The false detection rate and missed detection rate of neural network for renal artery identification in laparoscopic renal surgery video were 47.22% and 17.49%, respectively (IOU=0.1). The leading causes of false detection were similar tissue and reflective light. The main reasons for missed detection were image blurring, blood dipping, dark light, fascia interference, or instrument occlusion, etc.Conclusions:Deep learning-based renal artery recognition technology is feasible. It may assist the surgeon in quickly identifying and protecting the renal artery during the operation and improving the safety of surgery.
3.Effects of preoperative mTOR inhibitors on partial nephrectomy for renal angiomyolipoma associated with tuberous sclerosis complex
Zhangcheng LIAO ; Dongxu QIU ; Yang ZHAO ; Zhan WANG ; Xu WANG ; Jiaquan ZHOU ; Yushi ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Urology 2023;44(9):670-674
Objective:To investigate the effects of preoperative mammalian target of rapamycin(mTOR )inhibitor on partial nephrectomy for renal angiomyolipoma associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC-RAML).Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on clinical data from 13 patients who were diagnosed with TSC-RAML and treated at Peking Union Medical College Hospital between August 2019 and July 2022. This cohort included 4 males and 9 females, with ages ranging from 22 to 66 years. All patients underwent partial nephrectomy, with 2 patients requiring two-stage surgeries due to bilateral RAMLs, resulting in a total of 15 surgeries being performed. Preoperative mTOR inhibitors, specifically everolimus (10 mg/d) or sirolimus (2 mg/d), were administered orally for at least 3 months prior to 7 of the surgeries. The effects of mTOR inhibitors on tumor size, tumor computed tomography attenuation value (CT value), and tumor CT enhancement were evaluated. The comparison of surgery-related clinical parameters was conducted between patients who received preoperative mTOR inhibitors and those who did not to assess the influences of mTOR inhibitors on surgery.Results:Compared to the baseline tumor, there was a significant reduction in tumor diameter after mTOR treatment [(6.4±3.1) cm vs. (8.7±3.9)cm], as well as in the CT value in both the unenhanced phase[(-18.63±48.73)HU vs. (-2.13±51.58)HU] and corticomedullary phase[(13.25±64.01)HU vs. (47.25±66.99)HU]. Additionally, tumor CT enhancement also decreased as compared with that before treatment [(31.88±18.20)HU vs. (49.38±20.63)HU]. Patients who received preoperative mTOR inhibitor showed a trend towards shorter operative time for removing per milliliter of tumor compared to those without preoperative mTOR inhibitor [1.06(0.18, 2.40) min/ml vs. 1.98(0.39, 5.03) min/ml] and so was the renal artery clamping time [0.17(0.03, 0.79) min/ml vs. 0.34(0.10, 1.71) min/ml]. Additionally, the amount of intraoperative bleeding for removing per milliliter of tumor was lower in patients with preoperative mTOR inhibitors compared to those without [0.72(0.19, 0.88) ml/ml vs. 1.69(0.59, 4.54) ml/ml].Conclusions:The administration of mTOR inhibitors before partial nephrectomy in patients with TSC-RAM have the potential to reduce tumor size and blood supply, as well as operative time, renal artery clamping time and intraoperative bleeding, which might contribute to surgery safety and preservation of renal function.