The extensive fibrosis in gastrointestinal neoplasms with severe scarring often makes
endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) difficult and unsafe to perform. The submucosal
fibrosis prevents the mucosa layer from lifting during injection. In addition, the
vessels in scar tissues are sometimes extensive and barely visible. Moreover, the
scar tissue is hard to cut with a standard endoscopic electrosurgical knife. Therefore,
ESD for this type of lesion results in more complications, and is associated with
a lower en bloc resection rate.
Here, we describe a trick for dissection of these fibrotic tissues. A flat lesion
was found near the cardia after previous endoscopic resection ([Fig. 1]). The biopsy demonstrated high grade intraepithelial neoplasia. The ESD was started
at the nonscarring site to create a wider submucosal layer for dissection before exposing
the scar ([Fig. 2]). A Coagrasper (FD-411UR; Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) was then used to grasp the fibrotic
tissue. Using the electrosurgical generator (ESG-100; Olympus), a soft coagulation
mode at 80 W was used briefly to coagulate the vessels in the fibrosis, and subsequently
a pulse-cut-slow mode at 40 W was used to resect the tissue ([Video 1]). The process was repeated to dissect the remaining fibrosis ([Fig. 3]).
Fig. 1 A flat lesion near the cardia recurred after previous endoscopic resection (green
arrows showed the margin).
Fig. 2 The submucosal scar was exposed during endoscopic submucosal dissection.
Fig. 3 Wound surface after completed endoscopic submucosal dissection.
Dissection of fibrotic tissues using a Coagrasper (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) during
endoscopic submucosal dissection.
A colonoscope type of Coagrasper was favored because its smaller jaws might easily
reach the narrow scarring submucosal space and decrease the thermal damage to the
surrounding tissues. As the scissors type knives are still unavailable outside of
Japan, we suggest that the method described here would be useful for lesions with
severe fibrosis.
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