This talk was presented at the 2018 SAGES Meeting/16th World Congress of Endoscopic Surgery by Dana A Telem during the Image is Everything: NIR Fluorescence in Every OR? on April 12 2018
Keyword(s): aberrant anatomy, accessory bile duct, acute cholecystectomy, adoption, allergies, BDI, bias, bile, bile duct injury, biliary anatomy, British Journal of Surgery, Calots triangle, Canada, cholecystectomy, choledocholithiasis, common bile duct, common hepatic duct, complications, critical view of safety, CVS, cystic duct, dissection, efficacy, elective cholecystectomy, evidence based medicine, extrahepatic biliary structures, FALCON trial, FDA, fetus, Food & Drug Adminstration, gallbladder disease, gallbladder injection, gallbladder surgery, Heparin, ICG, indocyanine green, inflammation, intraoperative cholangiogram, intravenous, intubation, IOC, learning curve, liver, Medicare reimbursement, medicolegal, Medtronic, morbid obesity, near infrared, NIR fluorescence cholangiography, occluded cystic duct, postop, postoperative, pregnancy, primary endpoint, prospective trial, QoL, quality of life, radioactive iodine, relative value unit, RVU, safety, standard of care, Surgical Endoscopy, technology, United States, vascular, visualization, white light
ICG–1:44 Surg Endosc 2018
Video clip of NIR fluorescence–6:52
Citations–8:37 Br J Surg 2010
Pros & cons–11:42
Contraindications & cautions–12:58
Key takeaways–13:25
FALCON trial–13:56 BMJ Open 2016