New Options For Surgery
Find out more about da Vinci or other lung cancer treatment options by calling Teresa Putscher, R.N., OCN, AAMC’s lung cancer nurse navigator, at 443-481-5881.
Find out more about da Vinci or other prostate cancer treatment options by calling Terri Hardesty, R.N., OCN, AAMC’s prostate cancer nurse navigator, at 443-481-5862. By acquiring this system through the efforts of the AAMC Foundation, AAMC is poised to be one of the first regional medical centers to offer advanced minimally invasive robotic surgery using the da Vinci S system. The da Vinci S system combines robotic technology with our surgeons’ skill to simplify surgical procedures and make new types of minimally invasive surgery possible for our patients. Surgeons “drive” tiny robotic instruments by operating controls while seated at a console, viewing a three-dimensional magnified image of the surgical field. The surgeon’s instructions are immediately translated for the robot and executed in real time, with the surgical instruments performing extremely precise movements in very small spaces. With this advanced robotic system, AAMC is poised to be one of the first regional medical centers to offer robotic surgery across many specialties, including gynecology and general surgery. Benefits of Robotic SurgeryRobotic equipment allows the surgeon to provide patients with the most advanced procedures and improved experiences and outcomes. Like other minimally invasive procedures, the advantages of da Vinci include smaller and less invasive incisions, less pain, fewer complications, and shorter hospital stays and recovery times. Other benefits of the robotic system include:
The da Vinci Robotic SystemThe da Vinci system consists of four parts. First is a console where the surgeon sits to operate, viewing a 3-D image of the surgical field. From the console hand, wrist and finger movements the surgeon makes are seamlessly transmitted to the surgical instruments inside the patient. On the monitor the InSite video Vision System processes, enhances and optimizes the images it provides for the surgeon as he or she operates. A patient-side cart holds two kinds of robotic arms—instrument arms and an endoscopic arm—that execute the commands of the surgeon. The arms pivot in small incisions called operating ports, and surgical team members help install instruments and supervise them and the robotic arms during a procedure. The arms are attached to EndoWrist instruments, each of which has a specific purpose like suturing, clamping or manipulating tissue. |
da Vinci S Robotic Surgery
2001 Medical Parkway, Annapolis Maryland 21401
(443) 481-1000 | TDD: 443-481-1235
www.askAAMC.org
