Authors : Ionut Faur; Ionel Nati; Laurian Stoica; Alexandru Isaic; Cristi Tarta; Fulger Lazar; Amadeus Dobrescu
Volume/Issue : Volume 6 - 2021, Issue 3 - March
Google Scholar : http://bitly.ws/9nMw
Scribd : https://bit.ly/3t65o7e
Obesity represents nowadays a high-level
problem worldwide with social, economic, and medical
implications. Therefore, during the last years a true
revolution has arisen regarding the way the suffering
patients were to be treated from a surgery point of view.
What we can confirm is that the way laparoscopic and
robotic surgery has evolved is truly amazing in such a way
that the next decade is considered to become a gold
standard regarding the way surgery will be performed.
Moreover, because of practicing these methods, obese
patients become a very special category in the surgical
fields.
On the other hand, some authors considered obesity as a
contradiction to everything that laparoscopic surgery
means but with the release of more other studies that
demonstrated the veracity and reliability of these methods,
things have lessened a bit from their end. In 1989, Reich
was the one who performed the first total hysterectomy by
means of laparoscopic surgery, method which was,
however, improved over the years with the aim of
expanding the applicability of this approach.
The main aim of this study is to analyze the influence of
obesity over the intraoperative and post-operative
evolution, in the context of total laparoscopic
hysterectomy.