Endogent: Centre for Anatomy and Invasive Techniques

The invention of new endoscopical techniques for surgery and interventional radiology demand improved training at postgraduate level. The Endogent Centre for Anatomy and Invasive Techniques support these requirements by establishing hands-on practical training courses by using new procedures for cadaver embalming. Cadavers fixed by conventional procedures using formalin for conservation, are of limited use for practical surgical courses due to the profound changes of colour, strength and fragility of organs and tissues. The new Thiel embalming technique is based on the use of 4-chloro-3- methylenphenol, various salts for fixation, boric acid for disinfecting, and ethylene glycol for preservation of tissue plasticity, while the concentration of formalin is kept to the strict minimum (0.8%). This results in well preserved organs and tissues concerning colour, consistency, flexibility and plasticity. The articular joints remain freely movable and the peritoneal cavity can be inflated for laparoscopic procedures. Up to now this cadaver model was used in our institute for laparoscopic bariatric surgery, colon surgery, arthroscopy and thorax surgery. Another feature is that the lungs can be ventilated during surgical procedures. Preliminary findings seem to indicate that the corpses also serve as a suitable phantom for assessing thorax radiological equipment. Expert clinicians work as tutors and give intensive instructions before the participants start with hands-on surgery. We intend to expose also our undergraduate medical students to demonstrations of surgical approaches on Thiel embalmed corpses, in order to reveal the need for detailed anatomical knowledge in the clinic at an early stage in the medical curriculum.