Entries Tagged as 'Gynecology'

SAGES Report: Single port access procedures, part 1

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Christopher Kelly

April 16th, 2008, at 11:38am · 3 Comments

Despite all of the breathless praise being heaped on NOTES at this year’s SAGES, there was still considerable excitement about single port access laparoscopy, another kind of über-minimally invasive surgery that has made great strides over the past year. In this two-part series, we’ll take a look at some of the devices that have made this platform […]

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Tags: Emerging · General surgery · Gynecology · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

SAGES Report: Hands-on with the Olympus NStream HD

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Christopher Kelly

April 15th, 2008, at 3:55pm · 2 Comments

 
The exhibit hall at SAGES 2008 was something of an HD wonderland; everywhere you turned, there was another laparoscope pointing at a flower, the minute stalks of the stamen revealed in excruciating detail on a nearby flatscreen.
Of all the high definition systems shown, we must say that we were the least impressed with the optics […]

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Tags: Cardiac surgery · Colorectal surgery · General surgery · Gynecology · High definition · Image capture and recording · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

SAGES Report: Hands-on with the Surgiquest AnchorPort

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Christopher Kelly

April 14th, 2008, at 12:40pm · 1 Comment

 
Sometimes a long trocar is a good thing: when your patient has a BMI of 40, for example, there will be a fair amount of abdominal fat to plow through. Sometimes, however, a long trocar is not so desirable: when you have just driven it into the aorta, say, or when it starts bumping into […]

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Tags: General surgery · Gynecology · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

SAGES Report: Sony’s ImageCore HD makes it easy for surgeons to record in high-definition

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Christopher Kelly

April 11th, 2008, at 7:53pm · 3 Comments

High definition laparoscopes offer phenomenal images, but as recently as this week we bemoaned the lack of user-friendly high definition recording platforms in the operating room. Sony’s new ImageCore HD, being shown this weekend in the SAGES exhibit hall, changes everything. This thing is so user-friendly and feature-loaded that, frankly, we can’t believe we’ve lived so long […]

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Tags: Cardiac surgery · Colorectal surgery · General surgery · Gynecology · High definition · Image capture and recording · Laparoscopy Equipment · Neurosurgery · Ophthalmology · Orthopedic surgery · Otolaryngology · Plastic surgery · Surgical oncology · Thoracic surgery · Trauma surgery · Urology · Vascular surgery

High definition capture in the operating room: what’s the hold-up?

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Jaime Landman
Associate Professor, Urology
Columbia University

April 9th, 2008, at 9:36pm · No Comments

 There’s no question that the increased clarity and anatomic detail of high definition images are major advantages during laparoscopy. So far we’ve used the Storz and Stryker systems and have been impressed with both. Recording the beautiful images they provide, however, remains a major remaining challenge. Although Storz and Stryker each offer their own capture systems, both […]

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Tags: Cardiac surgery · Emerging · General surgery · Gynecology · High definition · Image capture and recording · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

Entrapment: it’s not just for Johns

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Jaime Landman
Associate Professor, Urology
Columbia University

April 8th, 2008, at 5:18pm · 3 Comments

 

Minimally invasive procedures are utterly remarkable.  The fact that one can dissect and mobilize an entire specimen with just tiny incisions is a testament to surgical skill and the amazing technologies available in the operating theater.  After a challenging extirpative laparoscopic case there is great satisfaction in seeing the large specimen mobilized.
But that’s where the […]

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Tags: Entrapment · General surgery · Gynecology · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

So much for the B team

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Christopher Kelly

March 18th, 2008, at 6:34am · 1 Comment

In what will come as news to almost no one, researchers have found that “after hours” procedures, defined as those beginning after 4PM, are associated with higher rates of complications than procedures starting between 7AM-4PM, even after excluding emergency cases and controlling for patient and procedure conditions.

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Tags: Anesthesia · Cardiac surgery · Colorectal surgery · General surgery · Gynecology · Neurosurgery · Ophthalmology · Orthopedic surgery · Otolaryngology · Plastic surgery · Surgical oncology · Thoracic surgery · Trauma surgery · Urology · Vascular surgery

There will be blood

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Jaime Landman
Associate Professor, Urology
Columbia University

March 17th, 2008, at 8:53am · 7 Comments

There is an amazing amount of hype and bad data surrounding the use of hemostatic and sealing agents. Despite thousands of manuscripts published on the various glues, pastes and potions currently being hawked, there is a major dearth of solid information.

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Tags: Cardiac surgery · Colorectal surgery · Drugs · General surgery · Gynecology · Hemostasis · Neurosurgery · Orthopedic surgery · Surgical oncology · Thoracic surgery · Trauma surgery · Urology · Vascular surgery

LigaSure Advance release event: we expect live magic and pony rides

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Christopher Kelly

March 12th, 2008, at 7:00am · No Comments

Over at Covidien’s website there’s a sign-up form for the “worldwide launch” of the LigaSure Advance at SAGES. We’re not exactly sure what they have planned, but we previewed this device a few weeks back and were quite pleased with it.
We’ll be publishing some initial reactions to the Advance after the event, so send us […]

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Tags: Energy devices · General surgery · Gynecology · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology

Samsung to release 3D-ready plasma televisions

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Christopher Kelly

March 4th, 2008, at 7:49am · 3 Comments

We’re getting just a little closer to hassle-free 3D images in the operating room. Last week Samsung announced that their line-up of 3D-ready televisions would finally debut in South Korea, and should be arriving in the United States in the next month or so.

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Tags: Emerging · General surgery · Gynecology · High definition · Laparoscopy Equipment · Orthopedic surgery · Urology