Jul
11
PROSTATITIS: LASER MINOR SURGERY AND OTHER NON MAJOR SURGICAL APPROACHES.
July 11, 2009 | Leave a Comment
LASER MINOR SURGERY
Yes, the laser is now finding its way into prostatic surgery. For some patients the balloon treatment doesn’t open the urethra enough. To help these patients, Dr. Roger S. Warner, a urologist at New York University in Manhattan, wields his laser to remove some of the offending tissue around the urethra, and then follows that up with the use of the balloon dilation. Dr. Warner said this treatment helped twenty-five out of twenty-nine patients treated.
Other doctors say that laser surgery, first used in medicine in the 1970’s, is only scratching the surface of its potential. In the future they say there will be a much greater use of the laser. Lasers can also be used to vaporize benign and malignant growths, and it’s all done quickly and simply without the patient trauma of an open surgery.
The role of laser surgery in urology is limited but it has a great potential. Dr. Israel Barken, a urologist in private practice in San Diego, and a researcher at University of California at San Diego Medical School, has a patent on a device to use in laser surgery of the prostate.
Intrasonix Company from Boston in conjunction with the Lahey clinic has developed a new device by the name of TULIP. They have used it in operations on 25 dogs so far with promising results.
In the future, from mid 1990, you may wish to ask your urologist about the possibility of having laser surgery by your urologist. Right now it’s still experimental, but work is going on in three places aroud the world.
OTHER NON MAJOR SURGICAL APPROACHES
Dr. Terrence R. Malloy, chief of urology at Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia, attacks the enlarged prostate tissue with ultrasound waves. The tissue is turned into a pulp and dislodged and then sucked out of the body by an aspirator.
Some research is now being done with microwaves. They are aimed directly at the enlarged prostate. Testing is now underway to see what results are of attempts to shrink the enlarged prostate tissue, thereby relieving the pressure on the urethra.
Another experimental type of minor surgery is the use of cryogenics. This utilizes a probe through the penis and urethra and into the heart of the enlarged prostate. The probe then releases liquid nitrogen into the enlarged tissue.
This intensely cold fluid freezes and shrinks the tissue and destroys it which relieves the pressure on the urethra. More experiments and results of this type of cryosurgery will be reported in the first half of the 1990’s we are sure.
Another new development in the opening of the urethra through the prostate is the insertion of a spring like spiral device that mechanically keeps the urethra open. This is a new technique and while some urologists have the springs available and can insert them, we expect much development in this area of the open urethra in the coming years.
