Robotic Distal Pancreatectomy and Nephrectomy for Living Donor Pancreas–Kidney Transplantation
Santiago Horgan, Carlos Galvani, Verónica Gorodner, Umberto Bareato, Fabrizio Panaro, José Oberholzer, E. Benedetti
- 发表年份
- 2007
- 引用次数
- 46
摘要
Living organ donation is of increasing importance to satisfy the demand of good quality organs for patients remaining for extended periods on the waiting list. While the benefit for the recipient is undeniable, the organ procurement represents an important burden to live donors in terms of invasiveness and long-term consequences. The latter can be minimized with careful donor selection. With the avenue of minimally invasive surgery, and more recently the availability of robotic technology, the surgical trauma can be reduced, the safety increased, and the recovery accelerated. In this case report, we present the first reported combined robotic distal pancreatectomy and left nephrectomy from a live donor. The surgery was performed using the Da Vinci robotic system with four small trocar incisions, and a short infraumbilical midline incision for hand-assistance and extraction of the organ. The donor operation lasted 5 hr and blood loss was only 100 mL. Both donor and recipient had an uncomplicated postoperative course and present with normal endocrine and renal function 3 mo after surgery. In experienced hands, advanced surgical procedures such as combined distal pancreatectomy and left nephrectomy can be safely performed in living donors with minimally invasive robotic surgery, dramatically reduced surgical trauma, and impressive postoperative recovery. The availability of minimally invasive robotic surgery may further increase the willingness for live organ donation from suitable donors.
关键词
相关论文
Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets
Daron Acemoğlu, Pascual Restrepo
2019
Reach and grasp by people with tetraplegia using a neurally controlled robotic arm
Leigh R. Hochberg, Daniel Bacher, Beata Jarosiewicz 等 11 位作者
2012
Campbell-Walsh urology
Alan J. Wein editor-in-chief
2012
Stroke rehabilitation
Peter Langhorne, Julie Bernhardt, Gert Kwakkel
2011