Type of Surgery
Information

Last updated: 11/24/2009
Normal results of a nephrectomy are dependent on the purpose of the procedure and the type of nephrectomy performed. Immediately following the procedure, it is normal for patients to experience pain near the incision site, particularly when coughing...
or breathing deeply. Renal function of the patient is monitored carefully after surgery. If the remaining kidney is healthy, it will increase its functioning over time to compensate for the loss of the removed kidney.
Length of hospitalization depends on the type of nephrectomy procedure. Patients who have undergone a laparoscopic radical nephrectomy may be discharged two to four days after surgery. Traditional open nephrectomy patients are typically hospitalized for about a week. Recovery time will also vary, on average from three to six weeks.
Advertisement
Sugar that we eat needs insulin in the blood in order for the sugar to be absorbed by cells and tissues. When this system goes awry it is referred to as diabetes. This animated video discusses Type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Search
Other Information
Nephrectomy is the surgical removal of a kidney.
The surgery is performed with the patient under general anesthesia. The surgeon makes an incision in the side of the abdomen to reach the kidney. Depending on circumstances, the incision can also be made midline. The ureter and blood vessels are disconnected, and the kidney is then removed.
The surgery can be done as open surgery, with one incision, or as a laparoscopic procedure, with three or four small cuts in the abdominal and flank area.
Recently, this procedure is performed through a single incision in the patient's belly-button. This advanced technique is called as Single Port Access Surgery.
There are alternatives today that do not require the extraction of a kidney. Such alternatives include renal embolization and partial nephrectomy, both of which are more practical because it does not look for a donor kidney, but simply works on the patient's kidney.
Other Information
It's a controversial arena -- the PSA is a marker of prostate bulk and size, but it's highly expressed in benign prostate disease as well as cancer -- so in that context it's not a specific marker.
-Arul Chinnaiyan
Find a Qualified Specialist
Looking for a specialist?
Please enter your zip code.


