New Jersey General Surgery
General
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Colon
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Endocrine
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Reflux Disease [GERD]
Each year, more than 600,000 surgical procedures are performed
in the United States to treat a number of colon diseases. Although
surgery is not always a cure, it is often the best way to stop
the spread of disease and alleviate pain and discomfort. Patients
undergoing colon surgery often face a long and difficult recovery
because the traditional "open" procedures are highly
invasive. In most cases, surgeons are required to make a long
incision. Surgery results in an average hospital stay of a week
or more and usually 6 weeks of recovery.
A technique known as minimally invasive laparoscopic colon surgery
allows surgeons to perform many common colon procedures through
small incisions. Depending on the type of procedure, patients
may leave the hospital in a few days and return to normal activities
more quickly than patients recovering from open surgery.
In most laparoscopic colon resections, surgeons operate through
4 or 5 small openings (each about a quarter inch) while watching
an enlarged image of the patient's internal organs on a television
monitor. In some cases, one of the small openings is lengthened
to 2 or 3 inches to complete the procedure.
Results may vary depending upon the type of procedure and patient's
overall condition. Common advantages are:
- Less postoperative pain
- May shorten hospital stay
- May result in a faster return to solid-food diet
- May result in a quicker return of bowel function
- Quicker return to normal activity
- Improved cosmetic results
Excerpted from Society of American Gastrointestinal
Endoscopic Surgeons' Task Force on Patient Information