What is laparoscopic surgery?

Laparoscopic surgery is the use of laparoscopy and its related instruments: the use of cold light to provide illumination, the laparoscopic lens (diameter of 3 ~ 10mm) into the abdominal cavity, the use of digital camera technology so that the laparoscopic lens captured images through the fiber-optic fiber conduction to the back-end signal processing system, and real-time display on a special monitor. The doctor then analyzes the patient’s condition through the images of the patient’s organs from different angles shown on the monitor screen and performs the surgery with special laparoscopic instruments. Laparoscopic surgery mostly adopts the operation method of 2 to 4 holes, one of which is opened on the umbilical cord edge of the human body, avoiding leaving long stripes of scars on the patient’s abdominal wall, and after recovery, only 1 to 3 0.5 to 1 centimeter linear scars are left, which can be said to be a less traumatizing and painful surgery with less bleeding and faster recovery, and thus it is also referred to as the “keyhole” surgery. Surgery. The development of laparoscopic surgery has reduced the pain of traditional incision, and the recovery period of the patient has been significantly shortened. In 1998, the author just contacted the development of laparoscopy, often said – laparoscopy is the development trend of gynecological surgery, after 14 years of clinical practice – laparoscopic minimally invasive treatment of gynecological diseases has undoubtedly become a trend.