This talk was presented at the 2018 SAGES Meeting/16th World Congress of Endoscopic Surgery by Matthew D Kroh during the Masters Robotic Panel on April 12 2018
Keyword(s): Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, ACGME, amortization, anatomy, biliary tree, case series, CBD, cholangiography, clips, common bile duct, common hepatic duct, consensus, console, consumables, conversion, cost, curriculum, cystic duct, da Vinci, dissection, docking, EAES, education, efficacy, enhanced imaging, equipment, ergonomics, Euorpean Association of Endoscopic Surgeons, extrahepatic biliary system, fat, fellows, first assist, gallbladder surgery, general surgery, general surgery residency, hernias, ICG, identification, indocyanine green, inflammation, laparoscopic cholecystectomy, laparoscopic surgery, laparoscopy, learning curve, length of stay, liver, LOS, management, masters robotic, minimally invasive fellowships, MIS fellowships, morbidity, multi trocar laparoscopy, outcomes, residency training programs, resident, reverse Trendelenburg, robotic cholecystectomy, robotic platform, robotic skills, robotics, safety, selection bias, shoulder, simulation, single-site robotic surgery, skin incision, specimen removal, standardization, team, technology, trainee, vessel dissection, web-based, wound infections
Citation–1:25 Lancet 1994
Lap vs robotic surgical outcomes–2:18 Surg Endosc 2017
Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2012
Controversies–2:50 Surg Endosc 2016
Robotic training–3:54
Cholecystectomy as 1st robotic case–4:26 Can J Surg 2009
Resident & fellow training–6:38 Surg Endosc 2008
Robotic cholecystectomy new technologies–7:50 Surg Endosc 2011
Enhanced imaging–9:50 Int J Med Robot 2012
Conclusion–11:32