Abstract

Laparoscopy has certainly brought considerable benefits to patients, but laparoscopic surgery requires a set of skills different from open surgery, and learning in the operating room may increase surgical time, and even may be harmful to patients. Several training programs have been developed to decrease these potential prejudices. to describe the laparoscopic training program for urological residents of the "Hospital das Clinicas" of the Sao Paulo Medical School, to report urological procedures that are feasible in dry and wet labs, and to perform a critical analysis of the cost-benefit relation of advanced laparoscopic skills laboratory. The laparoscopic skill lab has two virtual simulators, three manual simulators, and four laparoscopic sets for study with a porcine model. The urology residents during their first year attend classes in the virtual and manual simulator and helps the senior urological resident in activities carried out with the laparoscopic sets. During the second year, the urological resident has six periods per week, each period lasting four hours, to perform laparoscopic procedures with a porcine model. In a training program of ten weeks, one urological resident performs an average of 120 urological procedures. The most common procedures are total nephrectomy (30%), bladder suture (30%), partial nephrectomy (10%), pyeloplasty (10%), ureteral replacement or transuretero anastomosis (10%), and others like adrenalectomy, prostatectomy, and retroperitoneoscopy. These procedures are much quicker and caused less morbidity. Laparoscopic skills laboratory is a good method for achieving technical ability.

Highlights

  • Today, there is no doubt that minimally invasive surgery is the method of choice by patients and surgeons as an approach to most urological surgical pathologies

  • Laparoscopic surgery requires a different set of skills from open surgery, and learning in the operating room may increase surgical time and even morbidity for patients, it may be against ethical principles

  • By the end of the ten week training program one urological resident has carried out an average of 120 urological procedures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is no doubt that minimally invasive surgery is the method of choice by patients and surgeons as an approach to most urological surgical pathologies. It has brought considerable benefits to patients such as, smaller incision with better cosmetic results, reduced morbidity, faster recovery, and shorter hospital length of stay [1]. Laparoscopic surgery requires a different set of skills from open surgery, and learning in the operating room may increase surgical time and even morbidity for patients, it may be against ethical principles. The acquisition of basic laparoscopic skills may help beginners who are learning laparoscopic procedures. It demands considerable time and dedication from trainees and requires appropriate teaching facilities. Current training involves the use of box trainers, virtual reality, and animal models. Box trainers with either innate models or animal tis-

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call