In the old days, one could refine surgical technique with just sutures and a board of styrofoam. Now, in order to learn laparoscopy, interns and residents have to use super-expensive simulators to which most hospitals don’t even have access. So even though laparoscopy is known to offer many advantages over open procedures, many surgeons still […]
Entries from April 2008
The problem with laparoscopic training
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Christopher Kelly
April 23rd, 2008, at 12:49pm · No Comments
Tags: Laparoscopy Equipment · Laparoscopy Training · Technologies and devices · Uncategorized
SAGES Report: Feel the burn
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Christopher Kelly
April 21st, 2008, at 11:16am · No Comments
The lower esophageal sphincter is a bothersome little junction that so often fails to do its job: either it’s too loose and burps up hot acid after each meal, or it’s too tight and won’t let anything down. Although we jam all sorts of devices down there to determine the need for surgical intervention, it’s […]
Tags: Bariatric surgery · Catheters · Colorectal surgery · Emerging · General surgery
SAGES Report: Everyone’s an endoscopist now
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Christopher Kelly
April 17th, 2008, at 11:30am · No Comments
At SAGES we got the distinct impression that every surgical procedure known to man has a one-way ticket to NOTESville. If that’s the case, then surgeons will need to get a lot more comfortable manipulating endoscopes, as their unintuitive controls tend to frighten novices. We stopped over at the Simbionix booth to check out their GI […]
Tags: Bariatric surgery · Colorectal surgery · Endoscopes · General surgery · Laparoscopy Training
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 […]
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 […]
Tags: Cardiac surgery · Colorectal surgery · General surgery · Gynecology · High definition · Image capture and recording · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology
SAGES Report: Thomas Krummel, on the demise of cardiac surgeons
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Christopher Kelly
April 15th, 2008, at 12:07pm · No Comments
What they were looking for; what they should have been looking for.
Tags: Cardiac surgery
SAGES Report: The Karl Storz Lecture
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Ian Drexler
Columbia College of Physicians & Surgeons
April 15th, 2008, at 12:06pm · No Comments
Finding it increasingly difficult to figure out the latest high-tech gadgets at Best Buy? Dr. Thomas Krummel has little sympathy for you. In the annual Karl Storz Lecture, Dr. Krummel addressed the problem of surgeons innovating in an increasingly technological world.
Tags: Uncategorized
SAGES Report: Hands-on with the NeatStitch
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Christopher Kelly
April 14th, 2008, at 3:58pm · 2 Comments
Surgeons don’t usually spend too much time worrying about the closure of trocar site incisions, but if the name of your game is speed, or if you find that patients wake up just a bit too quickly during suturing, then NeatStitch is your tool.
The device is inserted in the trocar, and then two blunt needles […]
Tags: Uncategorized
SAGES Report: Hungry? How about swallowing this bag?
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Christopher Kelly
April 14th, 2008, at 3:06pm · 3 Comments
During the SAGES emerging technologies session, which to us was like an early Christmas, Dr. Dmitry Nepomnayshy presented his experience using the EndoBarrier, an endoscopically-deployed impermeable tube that is placed in the duodenum to prevent absorption.
Two patients have received the full treatment so far; within twelve weeks, one lost 11 pounds and the other 26 pounds. […]
Tags: Bariatric surgery · Emerging · General surgery
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 […]
Tags: General surgery · Gynecology · Laparoscopy Equipment · Urology



