Heart Surgery Goes High-Tech

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Centura Health – Penrose St Francis Health Services

Posted on

Oct 20, 2009

Book/Edition

Colorado - Colorado Springs

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When Tom Daschbach, 65, and a resident of Colorado Springs, was told by his cardiologist he needed heart surgery, his first words were you gotta be kidding. Ten years ago, heart valve surgery meant cracking open the chest, spreading the ribs, and a long, painful recovery. Todays surgery techniques offer so much more. Many operations for the heart and heart valves no longer require splitting the chest open or cracking the breastbone, said Dr. John Mehall, Director of Robotic and Minimally Invasive Surgery at Penrose-St. Francis Health Services in Colorado Springs. Instead, were able to do minimally invasive and robotic-assisted surgery. Almost all valve surgeries can now be done without splitting open the chest. Dr. Mehall is considered a pioneer in the field of minimally-invasive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery techniques. This includes robotic-assisted surgery using southern Colorado's only da Vinci surgical robot.
In robotic-assisted surgery, the surgeon uses a specially-designed computer console to control surgical instruments on thin robotic arms. This allows the surgeon to perform complex surgeries with smaller incisions and precise motion control, often resulting in improved outcomes for patients. The benefits of most types of minimally invasive surgery includes cutting in half the average hospital stay and recovery time, less pain and scarring, decreased risk of infection, and little to no lifting restrictions.
With the minimally invasive surgery, grandparents can still pick up their grand-kids, Dr. Mehall said. Quality of life is higher and the return to the patients usual lifestyle is much quicker. Overall, its much less traumatic for them.
He did a great job, Daschbach said of Dr. Mehall. It only took about three weeks for me to get back to normal.
For more information and to take a Heart Risk Assessment, call Dr Mehall at 719-473-3550, or visit the Penrose-St. Francis Heart Institute at http://www.penrosestfrancis.org

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