ISSN: 2168-9857
						Tomé Lopes
	
					    												
Portugal						                            
                            
						
 Research Article
												Omalgia in Laparoscopic Kidney Surgery 						
Author(s): Sandro Gaspar, José Santos Dias and Tomé Lopes
Sandro Gaspar, José Santos Dias and Tomé Lopes
             
						
												
				 Minimal invasive surgery has well-known advantages. The majority of procedures performed on the kidney are now-a-days laparoscopic, with several advantages over laparotomy: decreased perioperative morbidity and mortality, smaller incisions, faster recovery, shorter hospital stays and earlier return to active life. Postoperative pain is the most common complaint and an important issue following laparoscopic surgery. There are different theories proposed to explain omalgia: distension of the peritoneal blood vessels and nerves during pneumoperitoneum, the associated inflammatory reaction (release of proinflammatory cytokines), rate of CO2 infusion; distension of the triangular and round ligament; time of exposure to the gas; gas retention inducing irritation of the phrenic nerve; nerve injury during patient positioning (shoulder abduction) and diaphragm injury. Debate still exists on ho.. View More»
				  
												DOI:
												 10.4172/2168-9857.1000148