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Faculty:
Ronald Lewis MD
Bao-Ling Adam PhD
Ann Young Becker MD
James A. Brown MD
Jeffrey Donohoe MD
Vijay Kumar PhD
Kenneth Lennox
MD
Yulin Ma, PhD
Thomas M. Mills, PhD
Donald Mode MD
Arthur Smith
MD
Martha K. Terris
MD
R.
Clinton Webb, PhD
Residency Program in Urology
Urology Academic Calendar
Contact Us
Considering a career in urology? See "Information
for Students".
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Laparoscopic Urologic Surgery Available At MCG
Dr. James Brown has been performing laparoscopic procedures to treat cancers
of the prostate, kidney bladder, testicle and adrenal gland at MCG since
April of 2002. This complex, advanced technique, also know as “minimally
invasive” surgery, requires specially trained surgeons and very specific
surgical equipment. As a result, few centers worldwide, and no other
hospitals in the CSRA, are able to provide this alternative to patients who
need urologic surgery. Dr Brown’s special training in laparoscopic urology
was made possible by the financial support of the Medical College of Georgia
and the Georgia Cancer Coalition.
The benefits of laparoscopy compared to standard open surgery include less
pain, less blood loss, faster healing time, less scarring, and less time off
work. During laparoscopic procedures, a thin needle is placed into the
abdomen through which carbon dioxide gas is introduced to inflate the
abdominal cavity to give the surgeon visibility and space to work. Two to
five dime-sized incisions are made in the skin through which hollow tubes,
called trocars, are inserted. A specialized fiberoptic telescope with a
video camera, called a laparoscope, is inserted through one of the trocars,
allowing the surgeon to watch a television monitor to see inside the
abdomen. The trocars are also used as paths for slender surgical
instruments. Also, cancerous growths and organs can be removed through these
trocars. A similar procedure is hand-assisted laparoscopy, in which one of
the incisions is made slightly larger so that the surgeon can insert a hand
inside the abdomen to assist during more complicated surgery.
In addition to patients with cancers of the kidney,
prostate, bladder, testicle and adrenal gland benefiting from laparoscopy,
other urologic abnormalities, such as ureteropelvic junction obstruction and
retroperitoneal fibrosis, can be treated with minimally invasive surgery.
LAPAROSCOPIC PROCEDURES PERFORMED AT MCG INCLUDE:
Nephrectomy and partial nephrectomy. The complete or
partial removal of a kidney may be necessary due to cancer, infection, or
kidney disease. During laparoscopic nephrectomy, a kidney without cancer can
be diced into smaller pieces, which can be removed through the trocars. A
cancer-containing kidney must be removed in one piece in order to prevent
spilling cancer cells and avoid making it difficult to tell the extent of
the cancer when inspecting it under a microscope; this requires a slightly
larger incision.
Prostatectomy. Laparoscopic removal of the prostate
gland to treat prostate cancer offers less blood loss, less pain, quicker
recovery, and allows more exact placement of sutures than a traditional
radical prostatectomy due to the magnification provided by the laparoscope.
Renal cyst unroofing. When cysts form on the kidney,
they are usually benign, but they can become painful, become infected or
effect kidney function making it necessary to remove the outer lining of the
cyst, known as unroofing, to release the fluid and pressure. During
laparoscopic renal cyst unroofing, an ultrasound probe may placed through a
trocar to examine the kidney for additional cysts beneath the surface.
Adrenalectomy. The adrenal gland sits just above the
kidney. Both benign tumors (which can cause high blood pressure and other
hormonal imbalances) and cancers may require removal of the adrenal gland.
Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is quickly becoming the standard treatment of
adrenal masses.
Cystectomy and partial cystectomy. The removal of
the bladder, known as a cystectomy, or part of the bladder, known as a
partial cystectomy, due to bladder cancer as well as construction of an
alternative means of urine drainage can be preformed laparoscopically.
Lymph node dissection. The removal of the pelvic and
retroperitoneal lymph nodes is an important diagnostic tool to determine the
extent of urological cancer and assess the necessity of further surgery.
Lymph node dissection is also an effective treatment for some urologic
malignancies, such as testicular and bladder cancer. Laparoscopic removal of
lymph nodes was one of the first laparoscopic procedures performed in
urology.
Pyeloplasty. A birth defect or scar where the kidney
connects to the ureter (the tube connecting the kidney to the bladder) is
called a ureteropelvic junction obstruction or UPJ obstruction. Repair of a
UPJ obstruction is necessary to prevent kidney damage. The scar or blockage
can be removed laparoscopically and the ureter carefully re-connected to the
kidney by fashioning it into a funnel shape. Kidney stones may be also
removed simultaneously if necessary.
Ureterolysis. Ureters obstructed by retroperitoneal
fibrosis may require surgery to free them from the surrounding scar-like
tissue. Laparoscopy allows a magnified view of this delicate procedure.
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