Although ERAS did not significantly reduce major postoperative complications or mortality, several clinically meaningful benefits were observed:
The study was observational and non-randomized; however, it provides practical evidence supporting ERAS implementation even in elderly oncologic patients.
Age alone should not exclude patients from ERAS protocols. With appropriate patient selection, prehabilitation, multimodal analgesia, early feeding, mobilization, and standardized discharge criteria, elderly patients can safely benefit from enhanced recovery pathways following laparoscopic colorectal surgery.
Source: PubMed Study
A study published in Pediatric Surgery International reviewed 1,894 children who underwent laparoscopic-assisted percutaneous extraperitoneal closure (LPEC) for inguinal hernia and analyzed every case of ipsilateral recurrence.
The overall recurrence rate remained very low at 0.58%, but detailed review of operative videos identified specific technical factors responsible for recurrence.
Video analysis demonstrated:
Polyester sutures demonstrated a trend toward fewer recurrences compared with silk, although statistical significance was not achieved.
Rather than simply reporting recurrence rates, this study demonstrates the educational value of routine operative video review. For pediatric laparoscopic surgeons and trainers, meticulous extraperitoneal needle placement, complete encirclement of the internal ring, secure ligation, and structured video audit may substantially improve technical quality and reduce recurrence.
Source: PubMed Study
A Chinese case series evaluated ultrasound-guided injection of 100 units of botulinum toxin A into the external anal sphincter one month before 3D laparoscopic sphincter-preserving surgery in 25 male patients with ultra-low rectal cancer and technically challenging pelvic anatomy.
At six months, only 12% of patients experienced major Low Anterior Resection Syndrome (LARS).
Although preliminary, this novel strategy may improve operative exposure in male patients with a narrow pelvis or high sphincter tone, potentially facilitating difficult stapling, transanal specimen extraction, and coloanal reconstruction during ultra-low rectal cancer surgery.
Source: PubMed Study
A multicenter retrospective study published in the Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery compared right-sided and symmetric three-port configurations in 201 patients undergoing laparoscopic bariatric surgery.
While objective scar quality remained similar between groups, patients undergoing right-sided port placement reported:
Port placement influences more than surgical ergonomics. Early patient satisfaction, scar acceptance, and body image are increasingly recognized as important patient-reported outcomes following bariatric surgery, making thoughtful incision planning an important component of patient-centered minimally invasive care.
Source: PubMed Study
A case-control study published in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology evaluated patients receiving GLP-1 receptor agonists undergoing outpatient upper endoscopy and colonoscopy.
Compared with matched diabetic controls, GLP-1 therapy resulted in:
Interestingly, patients undergoing combined EGD and colonoscopy following 24-hour liquid preparation demonstrated less gastric retention than patients undergoing upper endoscopy alone.
As GLP-1 receptor agonists become increasingly common among bariatric, metabolic, and diabetic patients, this study suggests that careful dietary preparation and individualized procedural planning may be more appropriate than routine cancellation. While aspiration precautions remain important, observed procedural risk appears relatively low.
Source: PubMed Study
Today's evidence reinforces that modern minimally invasive surgery extends beyond operative technique alone. Enhanced recovery pathways, meticulous technical auditing, innovative exposure strategies, patient-centered port planning, and thoughtful perioperative management—including the growing impact of GLP-1 therapies—are all contributing to safer surgery, faster recovery, improved patient satisfaction, and more personalized surgical care across colorectal, pediatric, bariatric, and gastrointestinal practice.