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Colonic Surgery — MRCS Revision

🔪 Colonic Surgery

Which operation for which tumour location — resection extents, vascular ligation targets, surgical planes, anastomotic options, and the rationale behind each oncological procedure.

The Oncological Principle of Colonic Resection

All colonic resections for cancer follow the same fundamental principle: remove the primary tumour together with its entire lymphovascular drainage territory. The lymph nodes that drain a colonic segment travel alongside its named blood vessels — so the operation is defined by which vessel is ligated at its origin.

Why “High Tie” — The Vessel Ligation Principle

For colonic cancer surgery, each named artery is ligated at its origin from the superior or inferior mesenteric artery (a “high tie”). This achieves two things simultaneously:

🔵 Maximal lymph node harvest — the lymphatic chain travels alongside the artery from the bowel wall to the origin. Ligating at the origin includes ALL nodes along that chain (epicolic → paracolic → intermediate → principal nodes).
🔵 Adequate margins — 5 cm proximal and distal clear margin from the tumour as a minimum; in practice the resection is defined by the vascular territory, not measured from the tumour edge.

The number of lymph nodes retrieved (minimum 12 nodes for adequate staging by NICE/RCS guidelines) determines whether N staging is accurate. Fewer than 12 nodes = inadequate resection for staging purposes.

Complete Mesocolic Excision (CME) — The Gold Standard

CME is the colonic equivalent of Total Mesorectal Excision (TME). The principle:

  • Dissect in the embryological fascial plane between the mesocolon (visceral fascia) and the retroperitoneum (parietal fascia) — the “holy plane” for the colon
  • Keep the mesocolon intact as an envelope — no breaches, no “coning” toward the tumour
  • Ligate the feeding vessel at its origin (central vascular ligation — CVL)
  • Evidence: CME + CVL reduces local recurrence from ~7% to ~3% and improves 5-year survival by ~15% compared to standard colectomy (Hohenberger data, Erlangen)
Location → Operation Quick Reference
Tumour LocationOperationVessel(s) Ligated at OriginAnastomosis
Caecum, appendix, proximal ascending colonRight hemicolectomyIleocolic artery ± right colic artery (at SMA origin)Ileocolic (ileum to transverse colon)
Mid-ascending colon, hepatic flexureExtended right hemicolectomyIleocolic + right colic + middle colic arteries (all at SMA origin)Ileocolic (ileum to mid-transverse / descending colon)
Transverse colonExtended right hemicolectomy (most common) or transverse colectomyMiddle colic artery at SMA originIleocolic or colocolonic
Splenic flexureExtended right hemicolectomy OR left hemicolectomy (depends on position)Middle colic ± left colic at IMA originIleocolic or colocolonic
Descending colonLeft hemicolectomyLeft colic artery (at IMA origin)Colocolonic (transverse to sigmoid)
Sigmoid colonSigmoid colectomy / High anterior resectionIMA at its aortic origin (high tie) or below the left colic take-off (low tie)Colorectal (descending colon to upper rectum)
Upper rectum (above peritoneal reflection)High anterior resection (HAR)IMA at origin. Superior rectal artery divided.Colorectal anastomosis above peritoneal reflection
Mid/lower rectum (at/below peritoneal reflection)Low anterior resection (LAR) + TMEIMA at origin. Full TME to pelvic floor.Colorectal / coloanal anastomosis ± defunctioning loop ileostomy
Low rectum (within 1–2 cm of anal sphincter)Abdominoperineal resection (APR)IMA at origin. Permanent end colostomy.None — permanent colostomy
The Concept of a “High Tie” vs “Low Tie” for the IMA

For sigmoid and rectal cancer, there is a specific decision regarding where to ligate the IMA:

Tie typeWhereLymph nodes clearedRiskCurrent recommendation
High tieAt the IMA origin from the aorta — above the left colic artery take-offAll IMA territory nodes including apical/origin nodesLeft ureter at highest risk (must be identified). Sympathetic nerve injury (ejaculatory dysfunction in men). Left colon blood supply depends on middle colic collaterals via marginal artery.Standard for rectal cancer. Better oncological clearance for apical nodes.
Low tieBelow the left colic artery origin — preserving the left colic arterySigmoid and superior rectal nodes onlyApical nodes not cleared. May leave tumour-positive nodes behind if N3 disease.Occasionally used for sigmoid cancer where the left colic preservation improves descending colon perfusion for the anastomosis. Less common.

The Left Ureter — The Single Most Important Structure in Left Colonic Surgery

The left ureter runs retroperitoneally, immediately posterior to the descending colon and sigmoid mesocolon. During high IMA ligation:

🔴 The ureter crosses posterior to the IMA root
🔴 The left gonadal vessels cross anterior to the ureter at the pelvic brim (“water under the bridge”)
🔴 The ureter must be positively identified and protected before the IMA is divided

Routine pre-operative ureteric stenting is used in: re-operative pelvic surgery, locally advanced tumours, post-radiation fields, or any case where the anatomy may be distorted.

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