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Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system

Bladder diverticulectomy is a surgical operation for symptomatic or large bladder diverticula. Typically, bladder diverticula are because of infravesical obstruction, although congenital diverticula can occur that may be large and symptomatic. The ability to excise the diverticulum completely, avoid...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rao, Ranjit, Nayyar, Rishi, Panda, S., Hemal, Ashok K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer-Verlag 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4247439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25484966
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11701-007-0030-1
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author Rao, Ranjit
Nayyar, Rishi
Panda, S.
Hemal, Ashok K.
author_facet Rao, Ranjit
Nayyar, Rishi
Panda, S.
Hemal, Ashok K.
author_sort Rao, Ranjit
collection PubMed
description Bladder diverticulectomy is a surgical operation for symptomatic or large bladder diverticula. Typically, bladder diverticula are because of infravesical obstruction, although congenital diverticula can occur that may be large and symptomatic. The ability to excise the diverticulum completely, avoid important adjacent structures, and close the bladder defect in a watertight fashion are key fundamentals to this operation. Traditionally done via an open extravesical, intravesical, or combined approach, bladder diverticulectomy can now be done in a minimally invasive fashion. Both laparoscopic and robot-assisted methods have clear advantages over open surgery, including smaller incision, reduced pain, improved cosmesis, and reduced blood loss, with an equivalent functional result. Large bladder diverticula, particularly those involving the ureteric orifice which required ureteric reimplantation, were often considered beyond the scope of conventional laparoscopy. Recently, use of robotic technology as a means of facilitating laparoscopic excision of bladder diverticula has provided the ability to treat large and more complex diverticula. Advantages of the robotic approach are the finer precision and dexterity of the instruments coupled with three-dimensional imaging. Although there are several case reports describing pure laparoscopic diverticulectomy, as far as we are aware there are no published reports of robotic bladder diverticulectomy. This paper will outline a safe and reproducible surgical technique for performing robotic bladder diverticulectomy using the da Vinci-S surgical system.
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spelling pubmed-42474392014-12-03 Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system Rao, Ranjit Nayyar, Rishi Panda, S. Hemal, Ashok K. J Robot Surg Original Article Bladder diverticulectomy is a surgical operation for symptomatic or large bladder diverticula. Typically, bladder diverticula are because of infravesical obstruction, although congenital diverticula can occur that may be large and symptomatic. The ability to excise the diverticulum completely, avoid important adjacent structures, and close the bladder defect in a watertight fashion are key fundamentals to this operation. Traditionally done via an open extravesical, intravesical, or combined approach, bladder diverticulectomy can now be done in a minimally invasive fashion. Both laparoscopic and robot-assisted methods have clear advantages over open surgery, including smaller incision, reduced pain, improved cosmesis, and reduced blood loss, with an equivalent functional result. Large bladder diverticula, particularly those involving the ureteric orifice which required ureteric reimplantation, were often considered beyond the scope of conventional laparoscopy. Recently, use of robotic technology as a means of facilitating laparoscopic excision of bladder diverticula has provided the ability to treat large and more complex diverticula. Advantages of the robotic approach are the finer precision and dexterity of the instruments coupled with three-dimensional imaging. Although there are several case reports describing pure laparoscopic diverticulectomy, as far as we are aware there are no published reports of robotic bladder diverticulectomy. This paper will outline a safe and reproducible surgical technique for performing robotic bladder diverticulectomy using the da Vinci-S surgical system. Springer-Verlag 2007-06-30 2007 /pmc/articles/PMC4247439/ /pubmed/25484966 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11701-007-0030-1 Text en © Springer London 2007
spellingShingle Original Article
Rao, Ranjit
Nayyar, Rishi
Panda, S.
Hemal, Ashok K.
Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title_full Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title_fullStr Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title_full_unstemmed Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title_short Surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da Vinci-S surgical system
title_sort surgical techniques: robotic bladder diverticulectomy with the da vinci-s surgical system
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4247439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25484966
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11701-007-0030-1
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