Dr Sameer Kaul, team remove Srinagar resident’s cancer with cutting-edge robotic technology, no incisions needed

Dr Sameer Kaul, team remove Srinagar resident’s cancer with Da Vinci Robotic system

Srinagar, June 08: Bashir Ahmad, a happy go lucky hardworking carpenter in his 70s, from Zainakote in Srinagar was suddenly faced with an unusual difficulty in swallowing solid food. He cherished his usual meal of rice, saag and meat and suddenly it hurt? Soon an obstructing growth in his food pipe which his biopsy proved to be a fairly common yet nasty cancer called ‘squamous cell carcinoma’ in medical terminology.

Cancers of Oesophagus (squamous or Adenocarcinomas) are fairly common in Northern mountainous tips of Iran, China, Afghanistan and Kashmir more so in the elderly.

   

Staging a cancer is next done by precisely imaging it with a CT scan, or MRI scan or increasingly now with a CT PET scan. Early stage cancers are treated by Oesophagectomy wherein neck, chest cavity, abdomen all need to be opened through big cuts.

But it appears Bashir got lucky. A team comprising Dr Sameer kaul, Dr Bhushan Thomre, Dr Feroz Pasha, Dr Sudipto De at Apollo Cancer Institute Delhi successfully removed his cancer ridden food pipe, surrounding lymph nodes, and fashioned a new food pipe out of his stomach yesterday. All without any cuts on his body, except three keyholes using a latest version Da Vinci Robotic system.

“A short hospital stay, minimal blood loss, considerably less pain are clear cut advantages,” says Dr Sameer Kaul, who’s always been at the forefront of embracing newer technologies in treating varied cancers. “The man behind the machine is important,” says Dr Kaul.

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