J Coll Physicians Surg Pak. 2026 Feb;36(2):253-257. doi: 10.29271/jcpsp.2026.02.253.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of duodenum suspension in the laparoscopic treatment of congenital duodenal obstruction (CDO).
STUDY DESIGN: A descriptive study. Place and Duration of the Study: Department of Paediatric Surgery, Ganzhou Maternal and Child Healthcare Hospital, Ganzhou, China, from January 2015 to December 2024.
METHODOLOGY: Patients who underwent surgery for duodenal obstruction were categorised into three groups: open repair (OP), laparoscopic repair (LA), and laparoscopy with duodenal suspension (Sus-LA). Patients with severe malformations or age >1 month were excluded. Demographics, comorbidities, intraoperative and postoperative data, and outcome parameters were evaluated. Descriptive statistics were employed to summarise the distribution of continuous variables, with normally distributed data presented as mean ± standard deviation and skewed data as median (interquartile range). ANOVA, Welch’s t-test, Bonferroni post hoc comparison, and Fisher’s exact test were used for pairwise comparisons.
RESULTS: Thirty-eight patients were included, with no significant differences in gender, age, weight, gestational weeks, obstruction aetiologies, and comorbidities among the groups (p >0.05). Operating time was shorter in the Sus-LA group [120.0, (48) minutes] compared to the LA group [(176.5, (75) minutes, p = 0.001)], but did not differ from the OP group [85.0, (31) minutes; p = 0.055]. Time to feed initiation was shorter in the Sus-LA group [4.0, (3) days] than the OP group [7.5, (4) days; p = 0.033], with no difference between the OP and LA groups [p >0.99]. The length of hospital stay differed significantly among the groups [23.0 (8), 24.0 (15), and 18.0 (8) days, respectively, (p = 0.036)]. Complications occurred in 13 (34.2%) patients, with lower frequencies in the Sus-LA group (7.7%) than the OP group (55.6%; p = 0.024).
CONCLUSION: Duodenal suspension in the laparoscopic treatment of neonatal duodenal obstruction is a manoeuvre that facilitates the surgical procedure and is associated with reduced surgical difficulty, shorter operative time, and decreased postoperative complications.
KEY WORDS: Neonate, Duodenal obstruction, Duodenum suspension, Laparoscopy, Complications.
PMID:41689328 | DOI:10.29271/jcpsp.2026.02.253