Robson Enterostomy

Robson Enterostomy is a surgical treatment for intestinal obstruction (intestinal obstruction) that involves filling the intestinal cavity through an opening of the intestine (stoma) using a medical instrument to prevent dehydration. Robson Enethorotomy was developed in 1956 by English surgeon Robert Robson. Before this, in the 17th century, approximately twenty-five patients in France recovered from advanced intestinal obstruction due to intestinal attachment to an intestinal stoma or other parts of the body.

Typically, the procedure is performed by laparotomy. The surgeon makes an incision in the abdomen and opens the abdominal cavity. Next, he identifies a pouch on the walls of the peritoneum - the cecum. To find the sac, the surgeon uses a medical instrument called a trocar (Trocart). After identifying the bag, the doctor begins to disconnect the intestines



Robson enterostomy or laparoscopic left right adrenalectomy and nephrectomy consists of creating a stoma in the mesentery of the small intestine opposite the left adrenal gland in a patient with pheochromocytoma to provide effective control of catecholamine hypersecretion. It was suggested by A