Background and Study Aims: Knowledge of the exact location of colorectal lesions is necessary but difficult
to establish during surgery. Thus, endoscopic tattooing has been used as an important
preoperative marker for identification. Using the conventional technique, we injected
tattooing agents directly into the colonic wall. However, to make sure that the tattooing
agents were adequately injected into the submucosal layer, and to prevent spillage
into the peritoneal cavity, we modified the conventional method and developed a new
tattooing technique: using India ink with prior and subsequent injection of saline
into the submucosa. The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess the clinical
utility and potential complications of the above two techniques of endoscopic tattooing
using India ink.
Patients and Methods: A total of 153 patients underwent laparoscopically assisted colectomy at the National
Cancer Center Hospital East, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan, between June 1994 and December
1999, and 91 patients underwent preoperative endoscopic tattooing by either the conventional
or the new technique. The conventional and new techniques were used from June 1994
to December 1997 (n = 36) and from January 1998 to December 1999 (n = 55), respectively.
Informed consent was obtained from all the patients.
Results : Using the conventional technique, the exact location of the lesion was identified
in 31 of 36 cases (86.1 %) during surgery. The complications of this procedure were
silent local peritonitis in two patients and reactive lymph node swelling in one patient
(3/36, 8.3 %). Using the new technique, in 54 of 55 cases lesions (98 %) were easily
identified (p = 0.034),and in only one there was a small leakage of India ink into
the peritoneal cavity (1/55; 1.8 %), no other serious complications were observed.
Conclusions: The results demonstrate that our new technique for endoscopic tattooing is probably better
than the conventional technique for clinical use, in terms of diagnostic accuracy
and safety, but this would have to be proven in a randomized comparison.
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S. Yoshida, M.D.
Dept. of Gastrointestinal Oncology National Cancer Hospital East
6-5-1 Kashiwanoha Kashiwa Chiba 277-8577 Japan
Fax: + 81-471-314724
eMail: syoshida@east.ncc.go.jp