Surgery
in sentence
572 examples of Surgery in a sentence
We get to write the script of the next revolution in
surgery.
This is a cancer
surgery.
Because they let you keep continence, bladder control, and sexual function after surgery, all of which is generally fairly important to the patient.
And the prospect I'm offering you, of an easier
surgery
... is that going to make that diagnosis any less terrifying?
And I think we shouldn't shy away in architecture, You know, brain surgery, atomic theory, genetics, economics are complex complex fields.
Could you put your hand up if you wear glasses or contact lenses, or you've had laser refractive
surgery?
He'd had cataract
surgery.
The history of
surgery
is filled with breakthroughs in how science and technology was able to help the surgeons of the day face their greatest challenges.
Fast-forward a few hundred years and we developed keyhole or arthroscopic surgery, which combines video technology and precision instruments to make
surgery
less invasive.
And more recently, a lot of you will be aware of robotic surgery, and what robotics brings to
surgery
is much like modern automated machinery, ultraprecision, the ability to carry out procedures at the tiniest scales with a degree of accuracy that even surpasses the human hand.
But robotic
surgery
also introduced something else to surgery: the idea that a surgeon doesn't actually have to be standing at the patient's bedside to deliver care, that he could be looking at a screen and instructing a robot through a computer.
We call this remote
surgery.
So what if I told you that you didn't really need a million-dollar robot to provide remote
surgery?
He's going to perform an arthroscopic
surgery
for us, a keyhole
surgery
of the knee, and I'd like to disclose that this patient has consented to having their operation streamed.
Well, back in my teaching hospital, we've been using this to support local district general hospitals and providing skin cancer
surgery
and trauma treatment.
NHH: We're also seeing the use of this technology at a global scale, and one of the most heartwarming stories I can recall is from the town of Trujillo in the north of Lima in Peru, where this technology was used to support the provision of cleft lip and palate
surgery
to children, children from poor backgrounds who didn't have access to health insurance.
Of course, we've still got a long way before we can solve the problem of getting
surgery
to five billion people, and unfortunately, some people still don't have access to internet.
And the third one got the same wry smile and said, "Well, while you were off doing your research, and you were off doing your monkey meatball surgery, that eventually we'll train monkeys to do, or cells or robots, or maybe not even need to do it at all, I was off running the future of the residency program, which is really the future of medicine."
I did not want to study
surgery.
A simple, well-proven
surgery
can restore sight to millions, and something even simpler, a pair of glasses, can make millions more see.
So they get it in about 20 minutes and those who require surgery, are counseled, and then there are buses waiting, which will transport them to the base hospital.
They receive
surgery
the following day, and then they will stay for a day or two, and then they are put back on the buses to be taken back to where they came from, and where their families will be waiting to take them back home.
So, as they finish the surgery, they just swing the microscope over, the tables are placed so that their distance is just right, and then we need to do this, because, by doing this kind of process, we're able to more than quadruple the productivity of the surgeon.
But not as the guy on the table; the guy doing open-heart
surgery.
Then I started thinking, would it be possible to hook up a heart/lung bypass machine and have a
surgery
where it was a tube going into my artery, and then appear to not breathe while they were oxygenating my blood?
We brought patients in, six to eight weeks prior to their scheduled surgery, did X-rays, and we then composed a scaffold specifically for that patient's size pelvic cavity.
I found myself in a hospital in an intensive-care ward, recuperating from emergency
surgery.
Some people say you shouldn't even work on the insurance policy because it might make you lazy, that you'll keep eating because you know heart
surgery
will be there to save you.
Same is true for organ failure, when you have loss of function owing to poor perfusion of kidney, of liver, acute respiratory distress syndrome and damage suffered in cardiac-bypass
surgery.
I'm an organic food-eating, carbon footprint-minimizing, robotic
surgery
geek.
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