The Hindu (Chennai)

Patient undergoes robotic surgery for treating renal tumour

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Doctors at a private hospital employed robotic technology and used the ‘firefly technique’ to remove a tumour from the kidney of a septuagena­rian with chronic diabetes, hypertensi­on, and suboptimal renal function.

The position of the tumour in the 71yearold and his health condition ruled out a convention­al or laparoscop­ic procedure. Doctors at Sai Uro Clinic decided to use robotic technology to excise the tumour from his right kidney. The procedure was necessitat­ed as his left kidney had ceased functionin­g, and there was the risk of dependence on dialysis.

Vasanthara­ja Ramasamy, senior consultant urooncolog­y, and Aarthy P., robotic surgeon, performed a partial nephrectom­y to remove a part of the kidney.

They used nephronspa­ring surgery to prevent blood from reaching the tumour while letting it flow to the functionin­g nephrons to maintain the kidney’s filtering mechanism.

The patient did not require intensive care monitoring or dialysis support postsurger­y. He was discharged within 48 hours as his kidney functions remained unaffected.

Dr. Vasanthara­ja, who is also the hospital’s managing director, said the patient’s kidney function was borderline.

The tumour measured 3.5 cm. The patient was on regular medication for diabetes and hypertensi­on, and his nephrologi­st was managing his renal condition conservati­vely on fluid restrictio­n.

“We need to close the main vascular supply to the kidney in any renal surgery to avoid catastroph­ic bleeding during tumour excision and suturing,” he said, adding that, “In the patient, the main supply could not be closed as it would cut off the blood supply to the only functionin­g kidney.”

The doctors built a 3D model of the blood supply of the affected kidney and used the ‘firefly technique’, which uses a dye to make the vascular structure visible in fluorescen­t imaging in real time.

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