The Robotic Operating Room
1. What does an operating room need to house a da Vinci robot?
2. What staff are required?
The only requirement for the operating room is the operating room size. The unit consists of a console that the surgeon sits at and the robot that needs to be wheeled in towards the patient. These pieces cant be too close while the patient is entering the OR suite as you need to have freedom for people to walk around.
The other components for the operation are components you would need for all surgery or laparoscopic surgery.
Laparoscopic equipment: TV monitors for the assistant and nurses, air insufflator, light source.
Standard equipment: cautery generators, suction canisters, anesthesia setup.
In our hospital there is only 1 room that is large enough for the robot to work in. The robot, although weighing in excess of 1000 pounds (I think) is relatively easy to move around. We move it to other parts of the operating room to practice with it and easily move it around the room between cases if we are doing 2 different operations that day.
Our hospital is building 3 state of the art laparoscopic suites which should have all the screens and lap equipment hanging from the ceiling. I m told there will a 42 inch plasma on the wall for everyone in the OR to see. Teleconferencing will also be available and my expectation is to have surgeons from all over the country and world come learn how to do some of the advanced robotic procedures we are doing at NBI currently.
I am hoping that the next generation of robots will be integrated into the operating theaters and will need less space.
What staff are required?
The main difference between this surgery and previous surgeries is that the surgeon is not at the field. I am currently performing surgeries with another urologist, but plan on hiring and training a physician assistant or nurse first assist to help. 90% of the operations can be just as safely, quickly, and precisely performed with a qualified non-physician assisting after the learning curve has been passed.
The anesthesia requirements are the same as any surgery except a full general anesthetic is needed (not a spinal). The blood loss is much less, as are the fluid shifts as compared to open surgery, so I would consider most cases low stress for the anesthesiologist.
The scrub nurse is the same as any operation. She does much less work than open once there is an experienced robotic team since the amount of instrument changes, sutures, etc. is less as compared to open surgery.
The circulating nurse is also necessary, as we sometimes use different devices from special clips or staples depening on the anatomy.
The only time that additional people are nice to have in the room is the setup and docking of the robot and the removal of the robot. We have developed several ways to remove steps to make this process as streamlined as possible.
Compared to open or lap surgery, the staff requirements are similar. The room size is the only difference with a large room needed for robotics.






Comments
Great work here, Doc! Very impressed with the level of information you're sharing and your leadership in the field -- for those of us who follow robotic surgery and ISRG as an investment it's invaluable to read first-hand reports like yours. I hope the field continues to advance in the years to come before (I hope) I require any kind of surgery, this sure seems to be a great deal for patients.
Thanks again.
Posted by: One guy | November 19, 2005 4:50 PM
I had a question from a friend:
Are you saying that a spinal anesthetic is considered sufficient for a non-robotic prostatectomy but not for a robotic prostatectomy? Why is that??
The short answer to the question is yes.
During open surgery the incision is kept below the umbilicus (belly button). This area is actually relatively easily blocked by a spinal anesthetic. This would be similar to a c-section as to the location of the incision.
Although I "can" perform am open prostatectomy with a spinal, I never have. Very few urologists do for that matter. General anesthetics are quicker to provide and have the same risks to the heart.
We think the risks to the lungs are slightly increased, but I have successfully performed many operations including dvP on patients with lung disease.
With laparoscopy of any type, the patient needs to be completely still and a general anesthetic is required.
In my opinion, if a patient's primary reason for not wanting surgery is they don’t want to be put to sleep, than they shouldn’t want any surgery and should opt for radiation.
If a patient is too sick to tolerate a general anesthetic, then watchful waiting or hormones are the way to go.
Posted by: Domenico Savatta, MD | November 20, 2005 8:31 AM