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Por Maria Sonnenberg
Para Al Día Today
[caption id="attachment_448" align="alignleft" width="415"] Dr. Edgar Figueroa inspects the surgical robot with da Vinci Clinical Sales Representative Christian Ehret. This robotic equipment utilizes magnified three-dimensional vision and tiny wristed instruments with the ability to bend well beyond the reach of the human wrist.[/caption]
MELBOURNE — Under the capable hands of Dr. Edgar Figueroa, robots can save lives.
Figueroa, who helped launch Health First’s Holmes Regional Center’s Level 2 trauma center in the late 1990s, now specializes in robotics surgery using the da Vinci Surgical System, a technology that has changed the medical landscape.
The da Vinci Surgical System helps surgeons such as Figueroa to operate in a minimally invasive environment that decreases the risk of infection and significantly reduces pain and recovery time.
This robotic equipment utilizes magnified three-dimensional vision and tiny wristed instruments with the ability to bend well beyond the reach of the human wrist, thus giving Figueroa almost superhero vision and dexterity.
This robotic equipment utilizes magnified three-dimensional vision and tiny wristed instruments with the ability to bend well beyond the reach of the human wrist.
Being a doctor was always a given for the Viera physician, who grew up in Puerto Rico watching re-runs of the old television hit, “Dr. Kildare.”
“He was my hero,” said Figueroa.
Figueroa, vice president of the hospital’s medical staff and chair of its Credentials Committee, was born in Luquillo, not far from Puerto Rico’s famous El Yunque rain forest. The University of Puerto Rico prepared him with pre-medical studies and the Isla Verde’s Universidad Central del Este conferred upon him his medical degree in 1980.
He remained in Puerto Rico for his internship, which he completed at Fajardo Regional Hospital. Figueroa finished his residency in general surgery at Ponce Regional Hospital.
Before heading to Brevard, the surgeon practiced at Hollywood Medical Center, Memorial Regional Hospital Trauma Center and Mr. Sinai Hospital, all in South Florida.
[caption id="attachment_458" align="alignleft" width="225"]
Dr. Edgar Figueroa now specializes in robotics surgery using the da Vinci Surgical System.[/caption]
While at the Department of Surgery of the University of Florida’s College of Medicine during the late 90s, Figueroa was tapped to launch Holmes Regional Medical Center’s trauma center.
“The trauma center has saved lives big time,” he said.
These days, he performs as many as eight da Vinci robotic assisted surgeries at Holmes. He is also currently working with Wuesthoff Medical Center Melbourne to use the hospital’s da Vinci system.
Studies have shown that the da Vinci system provides significantly better outcomes with procedures that involve hernias, the gall bladder and the colon, among many other issues.
Because there is only one tiny incision made, in the belly button, there is less risk for infection and minimal scarring because of the small size of the site. There is also much less pain for the patient when compared even with other forms of minimally invasive surgery that are in themselves better than open surgery.
Figueroa, listed in the da Vinci database as being on the top 20 percent of physicians who specializes in robotics, firmly believes robotics will be a mainstay in medicine.
“It has grown by leaps and bounds, particularly in Brevard, where it grew about 300 percent year-to-year,” he said.
Dr. Edgar Figueroa welcomes new patients at his office located at 1223 Gateway Drive, Suite 2B, Melbourne. For more information, call 321-725-4500, extension 7420.
ESPAÑOL
Doctor puertorriqueño hace cirujías por medio de un robot
Por Maria Sonnenberg Para Al Día Today [caption id="attachment_460" align="alignleft" width="225"]