Robotic Surgery Provides Less Pain and Greater Safety

For high-risk patients, such as those with kidney disease or other chronic conditions, these benefits can mean the difference between a long, difficult recovery and a smooth return to daily life.

  1. Faster Recovery and Shorter Hospital Stay

Because the procedure is minimally invasive, using small “keyhole” incisions instead of a large cut, the body has less to heal.

  • The Benefit:
    Patients often leave the hospital days sooner than they would after open surgery.
  • Why it matters:
    Spending less time in the hospital lowers the risk of infections such as pneumonia or MRSA, which is especially important for people with weaker immune systems.
  1. Less Pain and Lower Opioid Use

Smaller incisions go through less muscle and tissue.

  • The Benefit:
    After surgery, pain is usually much less, so patients need fewer strong painkillers (opioids) during recovery.
  • Why it matters:
    For people with kidney problems, using fewer opioids is important because some pain medicines can accumulate and become harmful when kidney function is reduced.
  1. Lower Risk of Infection and Complications

The robotic arms are highly precise and sterile, helping keep the small incisions clean.

  • The Benefit:
    Surgical site infections are much less common with robotic surgery than with open surgery.
  • Why it matters:
    People with diabetes or kidney failure often heal more slowly. Smaller incisions are less likely to open or become infected.
  1. Less Blood Loss

The robotic system uses a 3D, high-definition camera to magnify the view, allowing surgeons to see small blood vessels clearly. The instruments also seal vessels as they cut.

  • The Benefit:
    There is significantly less blood loss during surgery, reducing the likelihood of needing a transfusion.
  • Why it matters:
    Avoiding transfusions is important for patients who may need a kidney transplant in the future. Transfusions can cause the body to develop antibodies, making it harder to find a matching donor later.
  1. Saving Healthy Tissue

The robot’s specialized instruments can bend and rotate more than a human hand, enabling very precise work in tight spaces.

  • The Benefit:
    The surgeon can remove only the diseased part of an organ, preserving healthy tissue.

Why it matters:
In procedures such as partial nephrectomy (removing a tumor from a kidney), the robot allows the surgeon to save the remaining kidney tissue, delaying or preventing the need for dialysis.