July 1, 2006
Cabell Huntington Hospital to Offer Advanced Robotic Surgery
By HNN Staff
Huntington, WV (HNN) – Cabell Huntington Hospital is the first hospital
in the Huntington area and the only medical facility within a 120-mile
radius to acquire the da Vinci Surgical System, a state-of-the-art robotic
platform designed to enable complex minimally invasive surgery with greater
precision.
With the September 2006 arrival of a new urologist highly experienced in the
use of the da Vinci Surgical System, the hospital will initially utilize
this technology for robotic prostatectomy, a procedure that offers prostate
cancer patients significant benefits over traditional open prostatectomy.
Over time, use of the system will be expanded to include general surgical
and gynecologic applications.
Performed through five small incisions in the abdomen, robotic prostatectomy
generally results in shorter hospital stays, less pain, less risk of
infection, faster recoveries and more complete eradication of cancer than
traditional prostate surgery. Because the da Vinci System allows for greater
visualization, increased range of motion and enhanced precision, surgeons
are better able to identify and avoid muscles and nerves that control sexual
function and urination, greatly reducing the risk of impotence and
incontinence. Patients who undergo robotic prostatectomy also tend to
experience less blood loss and require less anesthesia.
“The advantages of robotic surgery are enormous for patients with prostate
cancer,” said Louis R. Molina, MD, a urologist with University Urological
Associates and Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine. “This
is a significant milestone in terms of surgical advancement in the
Huntington area, cancer treatment and improved quality of life for our
patients. No longer will these patients be required to travel long distances
to receive the most advanced care and treatment available.”
Molina said University Urological Associates will soon announce the
recruitment of a new urologist who has performed several hundred robotic
prostatectomies with the da Vinci Surgical System. World-wide, thousands of
robotic prostatectomies are performed each year. Approximately 40 percent of
all prostate surgeries in the United States are now performed with the aid
of a surgical robot.
The da Vinci Surgical System provides the surgeon with four robotic arms to
operate and allows for the surgeon’s hand movements to be scaled, filtered
and translated into precise movements of micro-instruments within the
surgical site. Although the general term “robotic surgery” is used to refer
to this technology, the system cannot operate or make decisions on its own.
Instead, the system, with instrument tips that can rotate like the human
wrist, is designed to seamlessly replicate the movement of the surgeon’s
hands in real time, dramatically improving dexterity and control.
With the da Vinci Surgical system, the surgeon operates from a comfortable,
seated position at a 3D stereo viewer console that visualizes the target
anatomy at high magnification, in brilliant color and with natural depth of
field. To perform a procedure, the surgeon uses the console’s master
controls to maneuver the patient-side cart’s four robotic arms, which
securely hold the micro-instruments and endoscopic camera. To move the
instruments or to reposition the camera, the surgeon simply moves his/her
hands. Built-in safety features reduce hand trembling and opportunities for
human error.
In 2000, the da Vinci Surgical System became the first robotic surgical
platform commercially available in the United States to be cleared by the
FDA for use in general laparoscopic surgery.








