Tokyo Guidelines 2018: surgical management of acute cholecystitis: safe steps in laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis (with videos)

Go Wakabayashi(Hakodate Central General Hospital), Yukio Iwashita(Oita University), Taizo Hibi(Keio University), Tadahiro Takada(Teikyo University), Steven M. Strasberg(Washington University in St. Louis), Horacio J. Asbun(Jacksonville College), Itaru Endo(Yokohama City University), Akiko Umezawa(Yotsuya Medical Cube), Koji Asai(Toho University), Kenji Suzuki(Fujieda Municipal General Hospital), Yasuhisa Mori(Kyushu University), Kohji Okamoto(Kitakyushu City Hospital Organization), Henry A. Pitt(Temple University), Ho‐Seong Han(Seoul National University Bundang Hospital), Tsann‐Long Hwang(Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital), Yoo‐Seok Yoon(Seoul National University Bundang Hospital), Dong Sup Yoon(Yonsei University), In‐Seok Choi(Konyang University Hospital), Wayne Shih‐Wei Huang(Chang Bing Show Chwan Memorial Hospital), Mariano Giménez(Universidad de Buenos Aires), O. James Garden(University of Edinburgh), Dirk J. Gouma(Amsterdam UMC Location University of Amsterdam), Giulio Belli(Ospedale Santa Maria di Loreto Nuovo), Christos Dervenis(Agia Olga Hospital), P. Jagannath(Lilavati Hospital & Research Centre), Angus C. W. Chan(Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital), Wan Yee Lau(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Keng‐Hao Liu(Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital), Cheng‐Hsi Su(Cheng Hsin General Hospital), Takeyuki Misawa(Jikei University Kashiwa hospital), Masafumi Nakamura(Kyushu University), Akihiko Horiguchi(Fujita Health University), Nobumi Tagaya(Dokkyo Medical University Saitama Medical Center), Shuichi Fujioka(Jikei University Kashiwa hospital), Ryota Higuchi(Tokyo Women's Medical University), Satoru Shikata(National Mie Hospital), Yoshinori Noguchi(Japanese Red Cross Nagoya Daini Hospital), Tomohiko Ukai(National Mie Hospital), Masamichi Yokoe(Japanese Red Cross Nagoya Daini Hospital), Daniel Cherqui(Hôpital Paul-Brousse), Goro Honda(Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital), Atsushi Sugioka(Fujita Health University), Eduardo de Santibáñes(Universidad de Buenos Aires), Avinash Supe, Hiromi Tokumura(Tohoku Rosai Hospital), Taizo Kimura(Fujieda Municipal General Hospital), Masahiro Yoshida(Japan Association for Development of Community Medicine), Toshihiko Mayumi(University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan), Seigo Kitano(Oita University), Masafumi Inomata(Oita University), Koichi Hirata(Hokkaido hospital), Yoshinobu Sumiyama(Toho University), Kazuo Inui(Fujita Health University), Masakazu Yamamoto(National Mie Hospital)
Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Sciences
November 2, 2017
Cited by 489Open Access
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Abstract

In some cases, laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) may be difficult to perform in patients with acute cholecystitis (AC) with severe inflammation and fibrosis. The Tokyo Guidelines 2018 (TG18) expand the indications for LC under difficult conditions for each level of severity of AC. As a result of expanding the indications for LC to treat AC, it is absolutely necessary to avoid any increase in bile duct injury (BDI), particularly vasculo-biliary injury (VBI), which is known to occur at a certain rate in LC. Since the Tokyo Guidelines 2013 (TG13), an attempt has been made to assess intraoperative findings as objective indicators of surgical difficulty; based on expert consensus on these difficulty indicators, bail-out procedures (including conversion to open cholecystectomy) have been indicated for cases in which LC for AC is difficult to perform. A bail-out procedure should be chosen if, when the Calot's triangle is appropriately retracted and used as a landmark, a critical view of safety (CVS) cannot be achieved because of the presence of nondissectable scarring or severe fibrosis. We propose standardized safe steps for LC to treat AC. To achieve a CVS, it is vital to dissect at a location above (on the ventral side of) the imaginary line connecting the base of the left medial section (Segment 4) and the roof of Rouvière's sulcus and to fulfill the three criteria of CVS before dividing any structures. Achieving a CVS prevents the misidentification of the cystic duct and the common bile duct, which are most commonly confused. Free full articles and mobile app of TG18 are available at: http://www.jshbps.jp/modules/en/index.php?content_id=47. Related clinical questions and references are also included.


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