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Endoscopic tattooing to facilitate colorectal lesions' identification during laparoscopic surgery is a reliable and widely used technique.
India Ink is the standard option for colonic tattoing. Different studies have been reported significant complications, of which the most common is peritonitis, due to ethylene glycol, phenols and animal-derived gelatine contained in the ink. This local inflammatory reaction is the principal reason of the formation of the adhesions detected during the laparoscopy, that make the intervention more difficult. To prevent infection or inflammatory local reaction India ink solution has to be sterilized and diluted, a cumbersome process. In the last years wide diffusion of another endoscopic ink, Sterile Carbon Particle Suspension, has reduced these complications. Sterile Carbon Particle Suspension is a prepackaged, sterile, FDA-approved formulation of pure carbon particle in suspension, that eliminates the need for preinjection preparation.
In an attempt to evaluate safety and efficacy of endoscopic tattooing in colorectal surgery using two different types of ink, a randomized clinical trial has been designed. Two types of endoscopic ink were evaluated: Sterile Carbon Particle Suspension (Experimental group) and India Ink (Control group) and.
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histologically confirmed malignancy planned for an elective, segmental laparoscopic colectomy.
Exclusion criteria
emergency surgery open surgery immune depressant disease immune depressant medication
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Interventional model
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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