Da Vinci Robot Prostatectomy Leads to Severe Nerve Damage
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Case Overview
This case involves a sixty-five-year-old male who underwent a robotic-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy. The patient was placed in the lithotomy position with his arms padded and tucked at his side with his hands supported on foam pads. The surgical staff reportedly braced the patient’s head and shoulders while placing his legs in stirrups, and then tipped the patient back into the Trendelenburg position before the first incision was made. During the surgery, the surgeon had difficulty identifying the vas deferens and seminal vesicles for a significant amount of time using the surgical technology, so a partner was called in to assist. The patient was taken out of Trendelenburg more than 6 hours later. Upon arrival in the PACU, a nurse noted that his head and face were severely swollen, and there were apparent strap marks and blisters on his arms due to a blood pressure cuff left in the contracted state for an extended period of time. The patient complained of numbness and tingling in his arms and hands as well as aching from the shoulders down. Electromyography (EMG) and neurological consult exams were consistent with compression nerve injury. A consult report from a hand surgeon stated that damage seemed to be related to the positional and compression injury during the prostatectomy. The patient underwent several surgeries by the hand surgeon in an effort to resolve the nerve injury but only received minimal improvement.
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