Robotic Surgery Expert Dr. David Samadi, MD Travels to Israel to Perform a Live Robotic Prostatectomy

By Httpwww.smart-surgery.com, PRNE
Wednesday, December 22, 2010

NEW YORK, December 23, 2010 - Dr. David Samadi, robotic prostatectomy (www.smart-surgery.com)
expert, as well as the Vice Chairman, Department of Urology, and Chief of
Robotics and Minimally Invasive Surgery at The Mount Sinai Medical Center in
New York City, continues to break barriers by sharing his robotic surgery
(www.smart-surgery.com/robotic-prostate-surgery) and prostate cancer
(www.smart-surgery.com/prostate-cancer) treatment skills with doctors
worldwide. Today, Samadi, a pioneer surgeon in the field of robotics,
performed his signature SMART Surgery Technique
(www.smart-surgery.com/smart-surgery) at Rambam Medical Center in
Israel, as part of his groundbreaking weeklong educational trip. SMART, which
stands for "Samadi Modified Advanced Robotic Technique," "takes oncologic
principles, combines it with open radical prostatectomy skills and builds
upon it with a unique robotic surgery approach," explains Samadi, about the
prostate cancer treatment
(www.smart-surgery.com/prostate-treatment-trifecta) procedure he uses
at Mount Sinai.

(Photo: photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20101223/NY21903 )

As seen today on Fox News and recently in the Israeli daily newspaper,
Yedioth Ahronoth (www.ynetnews.com) (Latest News), Dr. Samadi
performed the live robotic prostate surgery for urologists at the Rambam
Medical Center in Haifa, northern Israel. It was the first robotic surgery
performed in Israel. The surgery, which boasts a survival rate of 95%, was a
complete success, with the patient relaxing comfortably in recovery. Said
Samadi, "The surgery was successful - the family is excited about this and so
is the hospital."

Rambam Medical Center, which is already a pioneer in trauma, liver and
kidney procedures, is sure to be revolutionized by the robot and the surgery,
said Dr. Samadi. As Fox News stated, "The future was brought to Israel
today."

Dr. Samadi is also scheduled to perform another live surgery at the Chaim
Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer, in Tel Aviv, on Christmas Day. It will
be televised live on Fox News at 10:45 am EST on Saturday, December 25th.

Dr. Samadi, who has performed over 3,000 successful prostatectomies in
his practice, one of only ten doctors in the world to achieve this volume,
strongly believes that experience is the key to success. "The problem with
robotic surgery is that many surgeons are not experienced enough," said Dr.
Samadi in Yedioth Ahronoth. "Israel's technology when it comes to urology is
definitely top quality, however, there are only a couple of robots in the
country, and the doctors using it are only in the initial stages of the
learning curve." Samadi feels that 500 surgeries is an adequate volume to
declare proficiency. "After all, the surgeon, and not the technology, nor the
robot, performs the surgery," he said.

Understandably, Dr. Samadi is a big fan of robotic prostate surgery and
refutes any claims that the procedure can cause impotence or incontinence.
"In my practice, 97% of my patients regain urinary control, and 85% regain
sexual function. The robot helps me perform better in surgery with superior
visual accuracy and bloodless field. With open surgery, you work blindly in a
blood-filled pool and end up experiencing complications. With robotic
surgery, it is more precise than open surgery, and nobody returns with
complications," he said.

Additionally, robotic surgery takes only an hour and a half, with an
average blood loss of about 50-100 CC. The hospital stay is usually only one
night and recovery is much faster, with less pain. But the biggest advantage,
says Samadi? "The prostate is removed and the cancer is gone and I know
exactly how much cancer there was, what kind, what stage, what risk, unlike
with other treatment options," he said. "If, God forbid, the cancer returned,
the patient can then successfully receive radiation therapy."

"At six weeks post-op, the patient's PSA (prostate-specific antigen)
level should go down to zero and should remain zero for the rest of their
life," Samadi continued. "Quality of life after prostate cancer surgery is
restored because you can heal, leave it behind you and move forward."

Looking ahead, Dr. Samadi dreams of a day where he can operate the da
Vinci robot from a remote location, such as from another hospital, even from
another city. He said, "I believe in evolution so don't be surprised if you
see this happen within the next two years, and I hope to be right there,
leading the charge."

For now, Dr. Samadi is excited to be working in Israel, sharing his
surgical skills. "Even though I live in the United States, I will definitely
always call Israel my home," he said.

    CONTACT:
    Dr. David B. Samadi
    Vice Chairman, Department of Urology
    Chief of Robotics and Minimally Invasive Surgery
    The Mount Sinai Medical Center
    Ph: +1-855-DRSAMADI
    +1-212-241-8779

Dr. David B. Samadi, Vice Chairman, Department of Urology, Chief of Robotics and Minimally Invasive Surgery, The Mount Sinai Medical Center, +1-855-DRSAMADI, +1-212-241-8779

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