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The Child Having Surgery

Methods of Surgery

What are the different methods of surgery?

With technical advances today, surgery does not necessarily mean large incisions, as in the past. Depending on the type of surgery, there are several surgical methods that may be performed, including the following:

  • open surgery
    An open surgery means cutting skin and tissues so the surgeon has a direct access to the structures or organs involved. Examples of open surgery include the removal of organs, such as the gallbladder or kidney.

  • minimal access surgery
    Minimal access surgery refers to any surgical technique that does not require a large incision. This allows the child to recuperate faster and with less pain. Not all conditions are treatable with minimal access surgery. Some of these techniques include the following:

    • laparoscopy - a procedure that uses a telescope camera lens to examine organs, check for abnormalities, or perform an operation. Laparoscopy is a surgery which avoids making large incisions. Tissue samples may also be taken for examination and testing.

    • endoscopy - a procedure that uses a small, flexible tube with a light and a camera lens at the end (endoscope) to examine the inside of the digestive tract. Tissue samples from inside the digestive tract may also be taken for examination and testing.

    • arthroscopy - with the use of an endoscope, surgeons can look at the interior of a joint. This technique is most often used to inspect and surgically correct the inside of the knee joint.

    • bronchoscopy - the examination of the bronchi (the main airways of the lungs) using a telescope (bronchoscope). Bronchoscopy helps to evaluate and diagnose lung problems, assess blockages, obtain samples of tissue and/or fluid, and/or help remove a foreign body.

    • cystoscopy - examining the inside of the urethra and bladder cavity with a small telescope camera lens at the end (endoscope).

    • gastroscopy - examining the inside of the stomach with a small, flexible tube with a light and a camera lens at the end (endoscope).

    • laryngoscopy - inspecting the larynx (voice box) with a small tube with a light and a camera lens at the end (endoscope).

    • sigmoidoscopy - examination of the rectum and sigmoid colon with a small, flexible tube with a light and a camera lens at the end (endoscope).



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Lucile Packard Children's Hospital is located in Palo Alto, adjacent to Stanford University Hospital, approximately 20 miles north of San Jose, CA and 40 miles south of San Francisco.


Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
725 Welch Road
Palo Alto, California 94304
(650) 497-8000


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