Robotic surgery at the forefront of medicine
By Gary Kimsey
Correspondent
When northern Larimer County resident Mike Stanton finished medical school
four decades ago, he knew cardiac surgery would be exciting.
Not only would he save lives, but he also envisioned new technology that
could benefit patients. Back then, the technology wasn't even available
to perform coronary bypasses, catheterizations or other procedures frequently
done today.
"It was relatively primitive compared to what we have now," recalled Stanton,
a surgeon with the Heart Center of the Rockies, Fort Collins.
The technology did come to pass, of course, but now it's surpassed by newer
technology: robotic-assisted surgery.
"Over the years I've been interested in the use of computers and advanced
technology in medicine, but there was no way of predicting 40 years ago
that we'd be where we are today with robotic-assisted surgery at the forefront
of medicine," Stanton said.
Stanton is the only cardiac surgeon using robotic-assisted technology in
the region bordered by Omaha, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Canada. The new technology
is offered in only 317 of the 6,000 nonmilitary American hospitals.
Stanton uses a $1.2-million da Vinci robotic surgical system that Poudre
Valley Hospital purchased in late 2004 from Intuitive Surgical Inc., Sunnyvale,
Calif.
The PVH system is used for cardiac, gynecological and prostate surgeries,
as well as some types of general surgeries. This makes PVH one of only
20 hospitals in the nation and the only one in the region to offer robotic-assisted
surgeries in all of those medical areas.
Various surgeries at PVH are performed by surgeons from the Heart Center
of the Rockies, Urology Center, Fort Collins Women's Clinic and Northern
Colorado Surgical Associates. The surgeons underwent extensive training
on the robotic equipment.
Robotic-assisted surgery is not used on every patient, only ones whose
conditions are suited for the technology. The surgery is far different
than traditional surgery.
Instead of standing next to an operating table, a surgeon sits at a nearby
viewing and control console and peers into binocular-like lenses. His view
- a 3-D look magnified 20 times - comes via a tiny specialized camera placed
inside the patient. The equipment allows him to change, zoom, rotate, and
move his field of vision, giving a more accurate view of arteries, veins,
nerves, and other internal areas than traditional surgery.
The surgeon controls robotic arms tipped with tiny endoscopic instruments
inserted through small slits into the patient's body. He manipulates the
instruments by moving his fingers and thumb together on a small handle.
Foot pedals focus the camera or move robotic arms.
All of this results in more precise real-time movements. The equipment
never operates on its own. The surgeon is always in control.
Robotic-assisted surgery is less invasive than traditional surgery. Stanton
said patient outcomes are better due to fewer medical complications and
less pain, bleeding, scarring and risk of infection. The hospital stay
is typically shorter - sometimes only a day. Recovery time at home is shorter,
usually by weeks.
Stanton uses the robotic system for mitral-valve repairs; closing holes
in the heart; removing tumors and masses from around the heart, aorta and
esophagus; and performing single-vessel coronary bypass surgery. In the
near future, he will perform more complex surgeries, such as aortic valve
surgery and two- and three-vessel coronary bypass surgeries.
One of Stanton's Fort Collins patients, John Farrell, describes himself
as a walking testimonial for robotic-assisted surgery.
On the day before turning 58 in April, Farrell was at work in his security
guard position when he experienced pain in his left arm. He went to PVH's
emergency room. Tests showed 90 percent of an artery was dangerously blocked.
He was a candidate for bypass surgery.
Farrell was apprehensive.
He remembered two traditional bypass surgeries that his younger brother
experienced. The brother's breast bone was cut open - "cracked open," as
the procedure is called. His recovery took nearly two months and was extremely
painful.
"It knocked him for a loop," Farrell said.
However, Farrell discovered a new playing field exists for bypass patients
who undergo robotic-assisted surgery. His breast bone wasn't cracked open.
Only two small incisions were made. Time in the hospital: two days. He
felt good enough within two weeks that he wanted to return to work.
"I left the hospital and never looked back," Farrell said. "I was virtually
pain-free. I flushed my pain medicine down the toilet two days after I
returned home. If a person has to have bypass surgery, robotic-assisted
surgery is the way to go."
Poudre Park resident Gary Kimsey is public relations and marketing coordinator
for Poudre Valley Health System.
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