4.5 Review

Electromechanical Morcellators in Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery: An Update

Journal

JOURNAL OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE GYNECOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 377-383

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmig.2013.12.121

Keywords

Hysterectomy; Laparoscopy; Morcellation; Morcellator; Myomectomy

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Study Objective: To assess all electromechanical morcellators used in gynecology to achieve an objective comparison between them and to make suggestions for improvements in future developments. Design: Literature review. Intervention: The PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, and MAUDE databases were systematically searched for all available literature using the terms morcellator, morcellators, morcellate, morcellation, and morcellated. All articles with information on morcellation time and morcellated tissue mass or the calculated morcellation rate of electromechanical morcellators used for gynecologic laparoscopic surgery were included. For general data of an existing morcellator, the manufacturer was contacted and Google was searched. Data for morcellation rate, type of procedure, and general characteristics were compared. Measurements and Main Results: Seven articles were suitable for analysis, and 11 different morcellators were found. In the past decades the morcellation rate has increased. The described morcellation rate ranged from 6.2 to 40.4 g/min. Motor peeling is currently the fastest working principle. Comparing hysterectomy and myomectomy per device, the Morcellex and Rotocut morcellators demonstrated a higher morcellation rate for myomectomy, 25.9 vs 30 g/min and 28.4 vs 33.1 g/min, respectively, although the X-Tract morcellator showed a higher rate for hysterectomy, 14.2 vs 11.7 g/min. Conclusion: Over the years, the morcellator has improved with respect to the morcellation rate. However, the morcellation process still has limitations, including tissue scattering, morcellator-related injuries, and the inevitable small blade diameter, which all come at the expense of the morcellation rate and time. Therefore, development of improved morcellators is required, with consideration of the observed limitations. (C) 2014 AAGL. All rights reserved.

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