This book examines the considerations, drawbacks, and advancements minimally invasive techniques have provided in the evaluation, management, and outcomes across a broad range of colorectal disease and procedures. For some readers of this book, a minimally invasive approach to colorectal disease may add a new dimension to the management of these patients. For others, it is the opportunity to learn helpful tips, specifics about a certain procedure, or to fine-tune what has already become a routine part of their practice. Even if you have successfully overcome many of the technical challenges of minimally invasive surgery, the pre-operative evaluation, peri-operative decision-making, and management of post-operative complications can be demanding and consuming. Wherever you may be on this spectrum, Minimally Invasive Approaches to Colon and Rectal Disease: Technique and Best Practices has something to offer. The underlying focus throughout the text is on providing pragmatic advice and reproducible techniques that can be readily implemented by surgeons of varying experience to successfully treat complex colorectal problems through minimally invasive methods.
Our author experts have years of experience with minimally invasive approaches to colorectal disease, and in some cases, have been the pioneers in this field. Despite extensive training and a wealth of clinical experience, many surgeons do not have the resources or volume to garner the skills and experience to feel completely comfortable with, or in some cases, master these techniques. In this text, our authors have cogently and equitably provided a unique, practical guide that covers the evaluation, step-by-step technical approach, and detailed management techniques. Within each chapter, they focus on the details to help overcome the issues that make these procedures and disease processes challenging. Yet, this is more than a "how to" manual or an algorithm-based guide.
About the Author: Howard Ross, MD
Chief, Temple University School of Medicine
Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery
Philadelphia, PA USA
Sang W. Lee, MD, FACS, FASCRS
Associate Professor of Surgery and Associate Attending Surgeon
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center
Vice Chief of Colon & Rectal Surgery
Weill Cornell Medical College
New York, NY USA
Bradley J. Champagne MD, FACS FASCRS
Associate Professor of Surgery-Division of Colorectal Surgery,
Case Medical Center
Program Director-Colorectal Residency/Director of Surgical Outcomes and Quality
St. John Medical Center
University Hospitals-Case Medical Center
Cleveland, OH
Alessio Pigazzi, MD, PhD, FACS, FASCRS
Associate Professor of Surgery
Chief, Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery
University of California, Irvine
Orange, CA
David E. Rivadeneira, M.D., M.B.A., FACS, FASCRS
Vice Chair, Surgical Strategic Initiatives For North Shore-LIJ Health SystemDirector, Surgical Services and Colorectal Surgery at Huntington Hospital
Professor of Surgery
Hofstra University School of Medicine