Publication | Open Access
Past, Present, and Future of Minimally Invasive Abdominal Surgery
123
Citations
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References
2015
Year
Laparoscopic surgery has revolutionized operative medicine by reducing trauma, pain, and recovery time, becoming the gold standard for many procedures, and inspiring further minimally invasive techniques such as NOTES and SILS, though these remain unstandardized. The study aims to investigate laparoscopic surgery using a robotic platform, emphasizing that patient safety and medical ethics must guide future research and implementation of these new techniques. Robotic platforms are employed to perform laparoscopic procedures, offering a promising avenue for further minimizing surgical trauma.
Laparoscopic surgery has generated a revolution in operative medicine during the past few decades. Although strongly criticized during its early years, minimization of surgical trauma and the benefits of minimization to the patient have been brought to our attention through the efforts and vision of a few pioneers in the recent history of medicine. The German gynecologist Kurt Semm (1927–2003) transformed the use of laparoscopy for diagnostic purposes into a modern therapeutic surgical concept, having performed the first laparoscopic appendectomy, inspiring Erich Mühe and many other surgeons around the world to perform a wide spectrum of procedures by minimally invasive means. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy soon became the gold standard, and various laparoscopic procedures are now preferred over open approaches, in the light of emerging evidence that demonstrates less operative stress, reduced pain, and shorter convalescence. Natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES) and single-incision laparoscopic surgery (SILS) may be considered further steps toward minimization of surgical trauma, although these methods have not yet been standardized. Laparoscopic surgery with the use of a robotic platform constitutes a promising field of investigation. New technologies are to be considered under the prism of the history of surgery; they seem to be a step toward further minimization of surgical trauma, but not definite therapeutic modalities. Patient safety and medical ethics must be the cornerstone of future investigation and implementation of new techniques.
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