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Science
CASE NOTES
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PROGRAMME INFO
Tuesday 21:00-21:30
Repeat Wednesday 16:30
DrÌýMark PorterÌýgives listeners the low-down on what the medical profession does and doesn't know. Each week an expert in the studio tacklesÌýa particular topic and there are reports from around the UK on the health of the nation - and the NHS.
Contact Case Notes
LISTEN AGAINListenÌý30 min
Listen toÌý16 May
PRESENTER
DR MARK PORTER
Dr Mark Porter
PROGRAMME DETAILS
TuesdayÌý16 MayÌý2006
A bunch of keys

Full programme transcript >>

Keyhole Surgery

Medical telescopesÌýwhich allow surgeons to peek inside the bodyÌýhave been around for more than a century, and were first used to examine the abdomen in 1901.
Ìý
In the last 40 years the laparoscope has transformed many operations, reducing hospital stays from days to hours with smaller scars and fewer complications.Ìý The laparoscope can also be used to diagnose life-threatening conditions like an ectopic pregnancy.ÌýÌý

In Case Notes Dr Mark Porter looks at the uses of keyhole surgery in modern medicine. His guest in the studio is Professor Michael Bailey from the Minimum Access Therapy Training Unit in Guildford

Diagnostic Tool

Gynaecologists were among the first to adopt laparoscopic surgery, initially to examine inside the pelvis. It's now used for a wide range of routine and emergency procedures. When women are sterilised, clips are placed onto the fallopian tubes using a laparoscope.

If a fertilised egg develops outside the womb - normally in one of the fallopian tubes - an ectopic pregnancy results, which is potentially life-threatening.Ìý

MarkÌýhears from Consultant Gynaecologist Mark Whittaker at Gloucester Royal Hospital as he performs an operation to rule out an ectopic pregnancy.

Gall Bladder Removal

The gall bladder is a small bag-shaped organ on the right hand side of the body, just below the liver. ÌýIt stores a green liquid called bile, which is produced to help the body digest fats and other substances. Ìý

Some people develop stones in their gall bladder, which can become inflamed and very painful. The commonest treatment is removal of the gall bladder - a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Before keyhole techniquest removal of the gall bladder involved a large incision and days in hospital.

We hear from Jennifer, who has her gall bladder removed at the Royal Berkshire hospital by surgeon Tom Dehn.

Training

Would-be surgeons learn by watching their more experienced colleagues and by using surgical simulators.

Mark meets Consultant Surgeon Bijendra Patel who runs the MSc course in Surgical Skills at Barts and the Royal London Hospitals, where they have one of the few laparoscopic surgical simulators currently in use in the UK. The simulator can be used to assess performance and develop the precise hand-eye coordination needed to work in the two dimensions seen on the screen in the operating theatre.

Mr Patel puts Mark's operating skills to the test on the simulator…
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