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"People will soon look back at any large incision as barbaric and archaic," says Dr. Paul A. Wetter, chairman of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons and a professor emeritus of gynecology at the University of Miami. In only the last few years, minimally invasive surgery has evolved from a popular technique used for the simplest of abdominal surgeries — such as a gallbladder removal or hernia repair — to a method that can treat even life-threatening diseases such as cancer, heart problems and emphysema.
An increasing number of these surgeries are augmented with sophisticated computer and imaging technology — such as robots. Such techniques elevate ordinary doctor skills to the super-human level by providing magnified, high-definition images and by preventing mistakes, such as cutting into the wrong tissue. Some doctors are even taking the first tentative steps toward operating without incisions, using the body's natural openings — the nose, mouth and anus — to gain access to its inner workings.
Think of it as surgery without scars.
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