Meta-analysis and systematic review of influence of different humidified carbon dioxide on intraoperative and postoperative gynaecological laparoscopic surgery
Introduction
Laparoscopy is widely used in clinical obstetrics and gynaecology surgery, and compared with traditional methods, it is less invasive, safer, and produces satisfactory results. The establishment of a carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum with proper pressure, humidity (0–5% relative humidity), and temperature (20–25 °C) is the basis for the implementation of gynaecological laparoscopic surgery.
However, studies have shown complications such as hypercapnia and acidosis may occur when humidified carbon dioxide is used. Temperature changes may also occur including intraoperative hypothermia (perioperative hypothermia) which may be caused by dry carbon dioxide gas stimulating mucosa, damaging tissues, and increasing oxygen consumption to disrupt the thermal balance of the body. In turn, this may prolong postoperative hospital stays, increase abdominal adhesions, and cause other health problems.
The technique of establishing a pneumoperitoneum by the intraoperative infusion of humidified carbon dioxide has been studied and applied clinically to reduce these effects (1).
Several kinds of humidification devices to establish carbon dioxide humidification of the pneumoperitoneum have been proposed. The first use of humidifying gas was in 1991 by Koninckx et al. (2), who used a “Persufflator” device to moisten the pneumoperitoneal environment. Their theory was that this would reduce the length of the operation and the risk of complications, better expose the laparoscopic field of vision, and prevent the formation of smoke during the operation leading to fogging of the laparoscopic endoscope.
Korell et al. and Ott et al. found that the use of gas humidification using 88–95% perfusion to form a carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum could reduce the probability of perioperative hypothermia and intraperitoneal mucosal injury, decrease postoperative pain, and shorten recovery time in laparoscopic obstetrics surgery (3,4). However, many practitioners and researchers doubt the positive benefits observed can be fully attributed to the use of humidified carbon dioxide gas perfusion.
The innovation of this study lies in the integrated analysis of relevant literature on the influence of pneumoperitoneum established by different carbon dioxide gas humidity on gynecological laparoscopic surgery. The following factors that may influence the operation during and after operation were mainly evaluated: volume of intraoperative gas consumption, duration of surgery, fog of laparoscopic endoscopic lens, length of postoperative hospital stay (recovery time), use of analgesics (morphine), and postoperative pain on the day after surgery.
We present the following article in accordance with the PRISMA reporting checklist (available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-1517).
Methods
Literature search
Composite logic retrieval and Boolean logic retrieval were used to select relevant literature, and the search terms “gynaecological laparoscopic surgery”, “carbon dioxide”, “gas belly” and “humidity” were used. The PubMed, Medline, Embase, Chinese Biomedical Literature, China National Knowledge Network (CNKI), Wanfang, VIP, and Google Academic databases were searched. All literature and reference lists of published reviews were traced to find those not indexed by the database, and the search time was from the establishment of the database to February 28, 2021. The quality of literature was evaluated using Rev Man 5.3 provided by the Cochrane system, and all search words were combined freely.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
The included literature met all the following criteria: (I) the subjects of the study were recipients of gynaecological abdominal surgery; (II) the study methods were random studies; and (III) the research data included postoperative pain, postoperative analgesics use, length of stay, iatrogenic hypothermia, and recovery time, as well as intraoperative lens fogging, operation time, and intraoperative gas consumption volume.
Literature was excluded for any of the following reasons: (I) laparoscopy was combined with other medical methods; (II) other unrelated factors were found during the operation to prolong the operation time; (III) the literature data was duplicated; (IV) accurate data could not be obtained; and (V) reliable data could not be provided.
Quality assessment
The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) of the Cochrane Collaboration was utilized to evaluate the pathologic control studies. A star system (full score is nine stars) was adopted to measure the results of study subjects, case comparison, and inter-group comparison. Selected literature with seven stars or above was considered as high quality and having low risk bias, and that with one star or no stars was considered low quality and having high risk bias. Literature with two-six stars was considered to be of medium quality and having medium risk bias.
Data extraction
Data extracted included (I) first author and year of publication; (II) number of subjects; (III) number of cases of pneumoperitoneum established in gynaecological laparoscopy; (IV) year of study establishment; (V) research design type; and (VI) surgical instructions signs and types of surgery.
Evaluation indicators included: (I) postoperative analgesia; (II) use of analgesic drugs; (III) hypothermia; (IV) operation time; (V) recovery time; (VI) length of hospital stay; (VII) intraoperative lens fogging; and (VIII) intraoperative carbon dioxide gas consumption volume.
Statistical methods
Review manager 5.3 was adopted for meta-analysis. For continuous variables, MD or SMD and 95% confidence interval (CI) were used as the efficacy analysis statistics. The included literature was first tested for heterogeneity using a Q test, and Rev Man’s risk of bias assessment chart was utilized to assess the risk bias. Each effect was expressed using a 95% CI. When the heterogeneity test showed that P>0.1 and I2<50%, the fixed effects model was adopted and when the heterogeneity test showed that P<0.1 and I2>50%, the random effects model was adopted.
Results
Literature collection results and NOS scale rating
A total of 119 publications were retrieved from the establishment of the database to February 2021 with 13 (5-17) meeting all criteria for further analysis as shown in Figure 1. NOS rating was then performed, and the general characteristics of the literature are shown in Table 1.
Full table
Evaluation results of literature risk bias
Figure 2 is the funnel chart of the included research literature, and Figures 3 and 4 are the Rev Man analysis showing that the included literature are not biased. According to the funnel plot, the included literatures were distributed on both sides of the midline, which was basically symmetric, indicating that the included literatures had high research accuracy and no bias in publication. For each methodological feature of the included literature, the evaluation results were input into the software to generate a bias risk evaluation chart. From the chart, the random sequence generation (selection bias), allocation hiding (selection bias), blind method of result evaluation (measurement bias), and incomplete result data (follow-up bias, selective reporting (reporting bias) are obviously at low-risk bias. The blinding (implementation bias) and other low-risk bias evaluations of subjects and researchers are also not high. In cases where a certain bias evaluation of individual literature was relatively high, this was not considered to affect the research of analytical factors.
Postoperative pain and analgesic use
Figure 5 shows the use of humidified carbon dioxide to establish a pneumoperitoneum during laparoscopic surgery in obstetrics and gynaecology can greatly improve pain scores on the day after surgery [MD =0.56 (0.46, 0.65), Z=11.13 (P<0.00001), df=3]. In contrast to dry carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum, there is a considerable difference in pain on the day after surgery [MD =1.59 (1.35, 1.82), Z=13.04 (P<0.00001), df=5 on the first day after surgery]. Similarly, the forest plot in Figure 6 shows the use of humidified carbon dioxide perfusion remarkably improves the dosage of analgesic drugs (morphine) on the day of surgery and the day after, [MD =0.25 (−0.04, 0.54), Z=1.68 (P=0.09), df=3 on the surgery day; MD =1.49 (1.15, 1.84), Z=8.58 (P<0.00001), df=3 on the day after surgery]. Figure 7 shows the temperature forest plots of gynaecological laparoscopic heating and humidifying gas compared with standard room temperature dry gas during and after operation, and Figure 8 shows the temperature forest plots of the anesthesia recovery time and hospitalization days of heating humidified gas for gynaecological laparoscopy compared with standard room temperature dry gas.
Surgical procedure
The forest plots in Figure 9 show that compared with the use of dry carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum, the consumption of carbon dioxide gas volume and the fogging of the laparoscopic endoscopic lens are substantially different, and the length of laparoscopic surgery is also significantly better using humidified gas [operating time MD =−0.38 (−0.75, −0.02), Z=2.04 (P<0.00001), df=4; fogging of the endoscope lens MD =0.57 (0.39, 0.74), Z=6.37 (P<0.00001), df=3; gas consumption volume MD =−0.82 (−0.93, −0.70), Z=14.36 (P<0.00001), df=7].
Discussion
During short-term surgery, hypothermia can improve the body’s tolerance to ischemia and hypoxia and reduce the oxygen consumption of tissues and organs. However, prolonged operation time and low body temperature may cause complications, increase pain, and lengthen recovery times, and the use of humidified carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum during laparoscopic gynaecological surgery can effectively avoid decreases in body temperature during prolonged operation times. Carbon dioxide is the gas most used as it has several advantages over other gases including it being colorless and odorless, inexpensive, having low flammability, and being easily soluble in water.
As the volume of carbon dioxide gas consumed during the operation increases, continuous and frequent replenishment is required, and in this process, heat loss caused by gas exchange will further cause the body temperature to drop. This study showed that the use of humidified carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum effectively reduced pain on the day after surgery and increased the core temperature during laparoscopic surgery.
In the study of Demco et al. (17), the use of humidified carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum was shown to reduce the pain evaluation of patients after laparoscopic surgery and reduced the dosage of analgesic drugs (morphine), although these results were not supported by Birch et al. who in a similar study found no reduction in pain levels (18). The establishment of a pneumoperitoneum usually involves perfusion with gas at room temperature, that is, 20–21 °C, which can cause the body temperature to drop if the operation time is prolonged.
While Sajid et al. (19) found that the use of humidified gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum could effectively prevent body temperature from falling during laparoscopic surgery, there are many factors influencing this. Heat loss is usually caused by radiation, convection, conduction, and heat evaporation through the surface of the body and the respiratory tract. Evaporation of heat around the surgical wound during surgery, unheated inhaled anesthetic gas, peritoneal irrigation, intravenous infusion, and long operation times may also cause the patient’s core body temperature to drop.
Studies have revealed that when the time of laparoscopic surgery was prolonged, especially when exceeding three hours, the probability of hypothermia and the volume of gas consumed during surgery significantly increase. After laparoscopic surgery, patients are prone to procedural complications such as hypokalemia, coagulopathy, and increased oxygen consumption, and an effective means to reduce the occurrence of complications during and after surgery is to prevent the fall in temperature. In addition, the degree of wound bleeding and postoperative wound infection are also related to hypothermia during surgery, which can also effectively shorten the postoperative recovery time of patients (20). In the analysis of body temperature items, this study focused on the significant heterogeneity of the research. The international use of external warming blankets during surgery is common and may have caused data errors when determining factors effecting body temperature.
There are significant differences in the length of hospital stay in patients who undergo laparoscopic surgery in obstetrics and gynaecology with the use of humidified carbon dioxide gas and dry carbon dioxide gas to establish a pneumoperitoneum, with the duration of hospital stay reduced in the former. However, it should be noted that in the literature included in this study, the length of hospitalization was short, which may affect the final analysis results.
The surgical field of vision during laparoscopy is extremely important, and serious consequences may evolve if it is blurred or impeded. The humidity created by a carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum is one of the main factors for fogging of the laparoscopic endoscopic lens, and some researchers believe increasing humidified carbon dioxide will minimize the fogging effect. However, this proposal is not supported by the literature included in this study, which suggests there is no correlation between humidity and fogging, and that the carbon dioxide temperature is more likely to affect lens fogging (21).
Some researchers believe that carbonic acid generated by the use of dry carbon dioxide gas in establishing a pneumoperitoneum stimulates the diaphragm, causing diaphragm pain, radiating shoulder radiating pain, and other symptoms because of the low body temperature and slow carbon dioxide metabolism. In contrast, humidified carbon dioxide inhibits the production of inflammatory cytokines and reduces pain sensitivity.
However, it should be noted that there are no clinical studies to date proving peritoneal tissue is affected by a carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum during laparoscopic surgery in obstetrics and gynaecology and animal experiments demonstrating that this reduces dryness of the peritoneum (22) are required. Long-term studies of postoperative effects and complications are also required.
Conclusions
Composite logic retrieval and Boolean logic retrieval were used to select 13 publications for meta-analysis to explore the influence of different degrees of humidified carbon dioxide on the intraoperative and postoperative characteristics of patients receiving obstetrics and gynaecological laparoscopic surgery.
The results showed that the use of carbon dioxide humidification to about 90% to establish a pneumoperitoneum maintained the core temperature of perioperative patients, prevented laparoscopic endoscopic lens fogging, reduced peritoneal tissue damage and postoperative complications, decreased patient’s perioperative pain and shortened their recovery time.
Acknowledgments
Funding: This study was supported by the Department of Science and Technology of Hebei Province (182777218).
Footnote
Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the PRISMA reporting checklist. Available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-1517
Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-21-1517). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
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(English Language Editor: B. Draper)