You can feel confident you’ll be in good hands because CorVasc
cares for more patients with thoracic disorders than any other
program in the state. Our surgeons were the first in Indiana to
perform robotic-assisted surgery. In fact, we are one of just four
programs in the nation to offer robotic-assisted thymus gland
removal. CorVasc surgeons also use such minimally invasive
techniques in most other thoracic surgeries getting patients
home sooner from the hospital and often back to work earlier
than with standard surgery.
Our thoracic surgeons assist patients with:
- Cancer or suspected cancers of the lung and esophagus
- Infections of the lung and chest
- Disorders of the airways
- Disease requiring lung transplant or lung volume reduction surgery
- Hyperhidrosis (excessive perspiration)
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
CorVasc physicians specializing in cancer surgery, work as a team
with medical and radiation oncologists, plastic surgeons, pulmonologists,
pain management specialists and various cancer support groups to provide
comprehensive cancer care. The Thoracic Malignancy Clinic, established
by CorVasc surgeons, enables patients to see these specialists in a
single office visit. Access to the latest therapies for cancer is also
maintained by voluntary participation in local and national research
treatments.
Minimally invasive thoracic surgery is also available from
CorVasc surgeons. Many operations previously requiring large thoracotomy
incisions can now be performed using several incisions often less than
an inch in size, a camera and special instruments. These techniques
result in less postoperative pain and often shorter recovery times for
patients. Procedures available using minimally invasive techniques
include but are not limited to:
- Lung resection
- Pleural biopsy
- Gastroesophageal reflux treatment
- Surgical treatment of swallowing disorders
- Removal of esophageal tumors
- Drainage of fluid and infections surrounding the lungs and heart.
- Sympathectomy for hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating)
see article below
Hyperhidrosis - As Described in Health & Life Magazine, Summer 2004
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The average person has to work up a sweat, but about 2 million
Americans perspire excessively without lifting a finger. They have a
condition called hyperhidrosis-extreme sweating of the hands,
underarms and/or face.
I've seen the condition devastate teens preparing for prom,
musicians and others," says Richard Freeman, M.D., director of
thoracic surgery at St.Vincent Indianapolis Hospital. "The sweating
makes even basic activities like holding a pen impossible."
Dr. Freeman, however, has pioneered a minimally invasive procedure
offering a lifelong cure. Called Video Assisted Thoracoscopic
Sympathectomy (VATS), the out-patient procedure places patients
under general anesthesia while the surgeon makes 5-millimeter
incisions on each side of the chest. "A tiny camera goes into one
incision and a cauterizing device goes in the other," explains Dr.
Freeman. "Guided by the camera's images, we can burn the nerves that
trigger the problem."
In the past, surgeons made three 1-inch incisions and snipped the
nerves, so patients had three-week recovery periods. "This new
procedure," says Dr. Freeman, "wipes out the problem with less
recovery time." For more clinical information regarding hyperhidrosis
treatment, contact
Dr. Richard
Freeman at info@corvascmds.com.
For more general information on hyperhidrosis, visit www.hyperhidrosis.us.
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