Wednesday 22 January 2014

Most Advanced Robotic Surgery for Prostate Cancer in India

Robotic surgery involves use of the da Vinci robotic surgical unit in performing complex surgical procedures such as prostatectomy (removal of the prostate gland for cancer). Originally developed for space and military uses, this advanced technology allows the operating surgeon to sit behind a console and control the robot that is next to the patient to perform surgery.

 This technology allows the surgeon to operate with very small and precise instruments under a 3 dimensional (3-D) vision, which is magnified up to 10 times. This is achieved by inserting the camera and the instruments into the patient’s body through small cuts (incisions) ranging from 5 – 12 mm in size.


Da Vinci master slave robotic system is used to completely eradicate cancer with minimal side effects for treating Prostate Cancer. Through this system a minimally invasive robot assisted radical prostatectomy technique has been developed in which doctors evolved a unique sequence of surgical steps.

The Da Vinci is a sophisticated master-slave robot that incorporates 3-D high definition visualization, scaling of movement, and wristed instrumentation. The operations with the Da Vinci System are performed with no direct mechanical connection between the surgeon and the patient. The surgeon is working a few feet away from the operating table, while seated at a computer console with a three-dimensional view of the operating field.

How is Robotic prostatectomy performed ?

SuniRobotic Prostatectomy, also known as Robotic surgery for prostate cancer or da Vinci Prostatectomy is a minimally invasive surgery that is now the preferred approach for removal of the prostate in those diagnosed with organ-confined prostate cancer. The da Vinci Prostatectomy may be the most effective, least invasive prostate surgery performed today. Though any diagnosis of cancer can be traumatic, the good news is that if your doctor recommends prostate surgery, the cancer was probably caught early. And, with da Vinci Prostatectomy, the likelihood of a complete recovery from prostate cancer without long-term side effects is, for most patients, better than it has ever been.
The operation is performed using the daVinci Surgical system and 3-D endoscopic and wristed instruments inserted through 5-6 small incisions across the mid-abdomen.

Robotic laparoscopy prostatectomy offers several advantages. Although experts do not agree as to whether robotic or open surgery is best, the majority of prostate cancer surgeries in the U.S. are being done with the laparoscopic/robotic approach, particularly at high volume medical centers that specialize in prostate cancer treatment. The post-operative goals for treating prostate cancer are the same regardless of whether the operation is done with an open or laparoscopic approach.

Less Scaring - The first advantage to robotic surgery is that it is an application of advance technology and is minimally invasive. Instead of having a 5 or 6” incision to the skin and abdominal fascia (See image below, left), patients have a series of small “band-aid” incisions.

A Shorter Hospital Stay - With smaller incisions, the postoperative pain is significantly less, which means your length of hospitalization is shorter - as is the time to return to usual activity. 

After the laparoscopic/robotic prostatectomy patients typically do not require an inpatient hospital stay over one night. Surgery is done in the morning and they typically go home after lunch on the first operative day.  Comparitively, after the open prostatectomy patients spend at least two nights in the hospital primarily for pain control, nausea and difficulty getting out of bed and getting back to an activity level that would be appropriate for them to be discharged home. .

Postoperative Catheterization - The third advantage of robotic surgery over open surgery is a reduction in the required postoperative catheterization time. After open surgery, foley catheters are left to drain the urine for usually two or more weeks. After the robotic approach, the catheter typically remains in place 5 to 7 days. The reason for this difference is unclear but may be related to the increased precision and visibility the robotic approach offers and also maybe that a running anastamosis (bringing the bladder neck and urethral sphincter back together) may be done in a water-tight fashion compared to the open approach. 

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