Farm Report
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UROLOGY A Safer Way to Snip
Approved a year ago by the Food and Drug Administration, the instrument works by electrically stimulating the nerves around the prostate and measuring the erection response. This helps produce a "map" of the critical nerves, which are invisible to the naked eye. Doctors can then navigate around them during surgery. By simplifying a challenging surgical procedure, the tool ultimately could make nerve-sparing surgeries more widely available to prostate cancer patients, says James Brooks, MD, an assistant professor of urology. The new device, called the CaverMap Surgical Aid, is being evaluated at 21 medical centers nationwide. |