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Surgical Smoke Nearly Killed Me - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - February 2018

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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surgery. As ESD grows in popularity, researchers have developed new types of retraction devices to help with the removal of lesions and polyps during ESD and EMR procedures. The devices, which fit over an endoscope, have expandable cages to stretch the lumen of the esoph- agus open to stabilize the scope and increase your doctor's ability to see potential lesions during an endoscopy. They also have forceps that can grasp, retract and manipulate tissue for better traction during an ESD procedure, says Dr. Gross, who adds that the technology isn't readily available yet. 4. Solve swallowing disorders Peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM), another relatively new and increasingly popular procedure, helps treat such swallowing disorders as achalasia, says Dr. Gross. The procedure works similarly to ESD in many ways — namely that you cut into and tunnel through the sub- mucosal layer — but it's focused on an area in the mid to lower esophagus. The doctor makes an incision into the wall of the mid esophagus and moves the scope into that incision, traveling through the submucosa until he's about 2 to 3 cm into the proximal section of the stomach. Once there, he performs a myotomy, cutting the tense muscle fibers that are causing achalasia. "With POEM, you're cutting down deeper into the muscle to release tension," says Dr. Sundararajan. "The only option [before POEM] was surgery from the outside in." POEM, introduced in Japan in 2008, hasn't been practiced in the United States until recently. OSM F E B R U A R U Y 2 0 1 8 • O U T PA T I E N TS U R G E R Y. N E T • 9 9

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