Animals (Apr 2024)

A Single-Port, Multiple-Access, Custom-Made Device Used in Laparoscopically Assisted Cryptorchidectomy in Standing Horses—A Preliminary Study

  • Rafaela das Mercês Silva,
  • Luiz Henrique Vilela Araújo,
  • Thiago da Silva Cardoso,
  • Stephany Lorrane Ishida Franco,
  • Heytor Jales Gurgel,
  • Pedro Henrique Lira Cerqueira,
  • Lucas Santos Carvalho,
  • Luis Gustavo e Silva Novais,
  • José Leandro da Silva Gonçalves,
  • Loise Araújo de Sousa,
  • Rodrigo dos Santos Albuquerque,
  • Marcos Duarte Dutra,
  • Tatiane Teles Albernaz Ferreira,
  • José Alcides da Silveira,
  • Marco Augusto Machado Silva,
  • Francisco Décio de Oliveira Monteiro,
  • Pedro Paulo Maia Teixeira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14071091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. 1091

Abstract

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This study evaluates a new multiport device with single access to the abdominal cavity produced with routine hospital supplies that could be applied to laparoscopically assisted cryptorchidectomy in standing horses. Initially, the new device was evaluated on five cadavers of bovine fetuses (n = 5), placed assisted in a minilaparotomy performed in the flank region. Subsequently, the device was evaluated in four cryptorchid horses treated during the hospital routine. During the evaluation of the new device, the possibilities of exploring the abdominal cavity, inspection, and intra-abdominal manipulation with two Babcock forceps were verified. The possibilities were described, and surgical time data were recorded and analyzed using descriptive statistics. In the cadavers, a wide exploration of the abdominal cavity was possible, with a laparoscopic inspection through the right paralumbar fossa and manipulation of intra-abdominal structures with Babcock forceps inserted by the new device. In cryptorchid horses, laparoscopically assisted cryptorchidectomy with a new device was feasible in two patients, and in the others, it allowed the diagnosis of adhesions and ectopic locations in the inguinal region of testicles retained in the cavity. Therefore, the new device was efficient in exploring the inguinal region of cryptorchid horses in the standing position. The present study is preliminary and can support future studies that aim to improve the developed prototype.

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