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Robot surgery is the way to go for prostate cancer

March 13, 2005


Less invasive surgery is the way to go for prostate cancer, say some of the nearly 300 men at a reunion Saturday at St. Vincent's Hospital.

They are among 500 men who have had prostate surgery performed by a robot controlled by a surgeon.

"The procedure was first performed in Detroit in 2000, and we have done it here since 2002," said Dr. Vipul Patel, director of minimally invasive surgery for Urology Centers of Alabama. He also is affiliated with St. Vincent's.


Patel said a robot, making five small incisions, can remove a cancerous prostate with less anesthesia, less blood loss and need for transfusion. Patients have a shorter hospital stay and faster recovery than when an 8- to 10-inch incision is made.

David Norris, 54, of Gardendale was the first St. Vincent's patient to have the robotic surgery about 2½ years ago.

He said that when the benefits of the procedure were explained to him, his decision was a simple one.

"Let's go for it," he said.

David E. Smith Jr., 62, from Charlotte, N.C., said he researched the procedure on the Internet after his urologist told him he needed the surgery.

"I wanted a place that had a lot of experience," he said.

And when he learned that nearly 500 men had undergone the surgery at St. Vincent's, he came to Birmingham.

"They kept me overnight, and then I stayed four days in the lodge" before going home, Smith said.

 

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