Robotic Surgery at Methodist
High-tech option offering many benefits, including smaller incisions and faster recovery time.
Methodist was the first hospital in Central Illinois (in 2005) to offer the four-arm da Vinci Robotic Surgical System.
Robotic surgery is used at Methodist for:
How does it work?
Using the da Vinci Robotic Surgery System, the surgeon sits at a console viewing a 3-D image of the surgical site. The system translates the surgeon's hand and wrist movements into precise movements of surgical instruments inside the patient.
What are the benefits?
Robotic surgery requires dime-sized incisions, in contrast to much larger incisions needed in traditional open surgery. And for many procedures, the robotic approach can be faster and easier than laparoscopic surgery.
Robotic Surgery Information and Resources:
Robot Assisted Coronary Artery Bypass
Robotic Esopagectomy
Robotic Surgery
Robotic Assisted Laparoscopic Prostatectomy
Robotically Assisted Hysterectomy
Robotically Assisted Endoscopic Aortic Valve Repair
Robotically Assisted Endoscopic Valve Repair, Percutaneous Mitral Valvuloplasty