
The surgical treatment of tumors can be difficult if they are small, premature, or deeply located. Furthermore, in this era of minimally invasive surgery, the development of preoperative localization or visualization techniques for invisible tumors has become even more important. With the help of this technique, it is possible to expect good long-term results through an optimal resection, and minimize unnecessary resections of normal tissues, thereby improving the patient’s quality of life.
Intraoperative localization of a target lesion is also troublesome, even during a laparotomy, in patients with malignant colorectal polyps that had been previously removed by an endoscopic resection, or small early colon cancer. Several strategies for the preoperative localization of colorectal tumors have also been studied, such as CT colonography, endoscopic metal clipping, endoscopic tattooing, and intraoperative colonoscopy.1,2 On the other hand, preoperative endoscopic tattooing, which uses tattooing agents, such as methylene blue, India ink, and indocyanine green (ICG), could lead to technical failure for effective tattooing or result in intraperitoneal complications caused by tattoo chemical spillage. Many studies have performed tattooing with the patient’s blood to minimize these adverse events.3,4 Tattooing agent-associated inflammatory complications do not occur when it comes to autologous blood tattooing because it is not a foreign body, unlike other tattooing agents.
In this issue of
Conceptualization: Heung-Kwon Oh. Formal analysis: Heung-Kwon Oh. Methodology: Jeehye Lee and Heung-Kwon Oh. Writing–original draft: Jeehye Lee and Heung-Kwon Oh. Writing–review and editing: Heung-Kwon Oh.
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