Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) is a leader in using state-of-the-art robotics to improve urologic surgery outcomes. This advanced technology’s potential to expand the scope of minimally invasive (laparoscopic) surgery and shorten patient recovery time, combined with the unparalleled experience of our urologic oncology surgical staff, is motivating more and more of our patients to consider robotic pyeloplasty.
What is a pyeloplasty?
Pyeloplasty is the surgical reconstruction or revision of the renal ureteropelvic junction (UPJ) - located between the kidney and the ureter. This is done to eliminate a blockage at the ureteropelvic junction, thereby enabling urine to drain freely from the kidney to the bladder.
What is a robotic pyeloplasty?
Robotic pyeloplasty uses a combination of high-definition 3D magnification, robotic technology and miniature instruments to enhance a urologic surgeon’s skills when correcting a blockage in the renal pelvis.
Open pyeloplasty typically requires a large abdominal incision and retraction to accommodate human hands, but only small incisions (see image below) are required for the robotic arms and surgical tools used in a robot-assisted pyeloplasty. There are four available arms – one equipped with a high definition 3-D magnification camera, two that act as the surgeon’s arms and a fourth arm that is used for holding back tissue. The camera gives the surgeon enhanced detail, true depth of field and a panoramic view, and the robotic hands’ broad range of movement enables greater dexterity and precision – critical for sewing the urinary system back together. The surgeon remotely guides the robotic arms while seated at the console, located a short distance away from the patient.
What are the benefits of a robotic pyeloplasty?
Robotic surgery’s miniaturization, increased range of motion, enhanced vision and mechanical precision offer significant benefits for pyeloplasty patients, including:
- Less blood loss
- Less post-surgical pain/less medication
- Quicker recovery and return to normal activities
- Less scarring
Who performs robot-assisted pyeloplasties at BWH?