|
Contact: Jill
Holder

Tony
Curtsinger and Stephen Strup, M.D.

“Traditional
radical prostatectomy procedures often result in
lengthy and uncomfortable patient recovery. At
UK Hospital, surgeons now are able to perform this
procedure through smaller incisions, significantly
reducing the patient's pain, blood loss, and recovery
time.”
-- Robert
Mentzer Jr., M.D.,
Frank C. Spencer Professor,
Chairman,
Department
of Surgery,
UK College of Medicine

|
LEXINGTON,
Ky. (April 12, 2004) -- Earlier
this year, the University
of Kentucky Hospital was the first hospital
in Kentucky to perform a minimally invasive,
coronary artery bypass graft using surgical robotic
instruments.
Today,
UK Hospital announced the state’s first laparoscopic
radical prostatectomy utilizing robotic instruments
from the beginning to the end of the surgical procedure.
Stephen Strup, M.D., associate professor of surgery
and director of Minimally Invasive Urologic Surgery,
Division of Urology , UK College of Medicine, performed
the procedure using the da Vinci® Surgical
System, developed by Intuitive Surgical.
On
Feb. 6, 2004, Tony Curtsinger, age 64, of Lexington,
was the first patient in Kentucky to undergo a
laparoscopic radical prostatectomy utilizing the
robotic system surgical system. A laparoscopic
radical prostatectomy is a minimally invasive surgical
procedure used to remove the prostate in order
to treat prostate cancer.
“Robotic
technology is an excellent addition to the minimally
invasive surgical program at UK,” Strup said. “The
addition of the robot will allow us to continue
to expand our minimally invasive program for prostate
surgery as well as other urologic procedures.”
Prostate
cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death
in men in the United States with approximately
40,000 dying of it each year. Prostate removal
is the most common procedure performed on men with
prostate cancer and is typically performed through
large, open surgical incisions, which often result
in lengthy and uncomfortable patient recovery.
“Traditional
radical prostatectomy procedures often result in
lengthy and uncomfortable patient recovery. At
UK Hospital, surgeons now are able to perform this
procedure through smaller incisions, significantly
reducing the patient's pain, blood loss, and recovery
time,” said Robert Mentzer Jr., M.D., the
Frank C. Spencer Professor and Chairman, Department
of Surgery, UK College of Medicine.
The
procedure is performed under general anesthesia
and usually requires from two and a half to four
and a half hours to complete, depending upon the
patient’s anatomy. Surgeons make an incision
from just below the umbilicus (“belly button”)
to the pubic bone to approach and remove the prostate.
The
robotic system at UK allows surgeons to insert
instruments through tiny ports, placed within one-centimeter
incisions in the body. Surgical procedures using
the robotic system require a minimum of three incisions;
one for a camera and two for surgical instruments.
Surgeons can rotate the instruments 360 degrees
through the incisions. The robotic surgical system
allows the surgeons to perform enhanced surgical
procedures by translating the natural hand, wrist
and finger movements on the system controls to
corresponding movements of the instrument tips.
“The
robot allows you to function with three-dimensional
vision and move instruments freely. Sewing with
the robot is infinitely easier to learn,” Strup
said.
Before UK Hospital purchased the robotic system,
Strup performed Kentucky’s first minimally
invasive laparoscopic radical prostatectomy in September
2003. Strup has performed more than 200 laparoscopic
radical prostatectomies to date both with and without
the surgical robotic system.
“At
UK, we have the best of both worlds in that we
have the ability to perform the procedure with
or without the robot. By incorporating the robot
we will be able to expand this procedure to other
faculty physicians quite readily,” Strup
said.
"At
UK Hospital, we are proud to be leaders in Kentucky
health care,” said Joseph O. Claypool, FACHE,
director of UK Hospital.
“We have an outstanding urology program and one of the best minimally invasive
surgery programs in the country, and we offer state-of the-art minimally invasive
management of most urologic disease. This surgical procedure is an excellent
example of how minimally invasive surgery can provide benefits to the health
care provider and the patient,” Claypool said.
UK
Hospital purchased the $1,290,000 robotic system
in December 2003. UK surgeons plan to use the robotic
surgical system for vascular, neurological, pediatric
and cardiothoracic surgical procedures.
|