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News Releases Surgeons
Use Robotics to Remove Thymus Gland
First endoscopic robotic thymectomy in Texas performed at
Memorial Hermann Hospital
Houston,
Texas, June 10, 2004 — Earlier this month, Memorial
Hermann Hospital surgeons performed the first robotic removal
of the thymus gland in Texas using the daVinci™ Robotic Surgical
System. Through three pencil-size incisions, cardiothoracic surgeons
Eyal Porat and Sebastian Bourgeois, assisted by robotics coordinator
Peter Herrera, removed the thymus gland of a 59-year-old Houstonian
who suffers from myasthenia gravis.
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Myasthenia
gravis is an autoimmune neuromuscular disorder affecting over
36,000 Americans. The disease may affect any voluntary muscle and
muscle weakness varies greatly among patients, ranging from a localized
form, limited to eye muscles, to a severe or generalized form in
which many muscles are affected.
Because
abnormalities of the thymus gland, which lies in the upper chest
area beneath the
breastbone, are associated with myasthenia gravis,
thymectomy — surgical removal of the thymus gland — is
recommended for most patients. The conventional surgery involves splitting
the breastbone and requires an intensive care stay of 24 to 48 hours
and 10 days in the hospital.
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“Prior to the introduction of robotic surgery, patients with
myasthenia gravis endured invasive surgery similar to open-heart surgery.
The patient’s sternum had to be separated, exposing the patients
to possible infection and prolonged recovery,” said Dr. Porat. “Patients
wouldn’t recover for six to eight weeks.” In this case,
however, the patient sat up in a chair in his room less than two hours
after surgery and that evening he was able to eat dinner. Less than
48 hours after surgery, he was at home.
Memorial Hermann
Hospital’s daVinci™ robotic
surgical system, manufactured by Intuitive Surgical, is FDA approved
for a number
of procedures including heart valve repairs, coronary artery bypass
grafting and pericardial procedures as well as several general surgery
and urologic procedures. In robotic-assisted surgery, mechanical surgical
tools are inserted through very small incisions called ports. While
seated at a console equipped with a three-dimensional magnified viewfinder
and manual robot controls, the surgeon performs the procedure. The
robotic arms, which are inserted into the ports, follow every move
of the surgeon: cutting, clamping and sewing with greater dexterity,
superior surgical precision and increased range of motion.
Memorial Hermann
Hospital has two daVinci™ robotic surgical
systems. One system is being used clinically for a variety of surgical
procedures, while the other has been used to establish the Memorial
Hermann Institute for Cardiovascular Research and Robotics Technology.
This training and research center opened in January 2003 and has already
trained numerous surgical teams from around the country. It is currently
the second largest training site for robotic surgery in the nation
and the only one in this part of the country. Besides establishing
Memorial Hermann as a training center for robotic technology, the research
center allows the Memorial Hermann physicians to be at the forefront
of this groundbreaking technology.
For more information
about robotic technology, call 713-500-5304.
For more information, contact Media Relations.
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