Nephrectomy
Nephrectomy, is a surgical procedure to remove a kidney
While the patient is unconscious and pain-free (under general
anesthesia), an incision is made in the abdomen or in the side of the abdomen (flank). The
surgeon may need to remove a rib in to perform the procedure.
The ureter (the tube that carries urine from the kidney to the bladder) and the blood
vessels are cut away from the kidney and the kidney is removed. The incision is then
closed.
Kidney removal may be performed as open surgery, which involves a large incision in the
flank. For certain patients, the procedure can be done laparoscopically, meaning the
surgeon uses an instrument called a laparoscope to visualize the kidney through a smaller
incision. Laparoscopic surgery requires 3 or 4 small incisions, usually no more than an
inch, in the abdomen and flank.
Why a Nephrectomy is performed
Nephrectomy, or kidney removal, is performed on patients with cancer of the kidney
(renal cell carcinoma); a disease in which cysts (sac-like structures) displace healthy
kidney tissue (polycystic kidney disease);
and serious kidney infections. It is also used to remove a healthy kidney from a donor for
the purposes of kidney transplantation.
How a Nephrectomy is
performed
Nephrectomy may involve removing a small portion of the kidney or the entire organ and
surrounding tissues. In partial nephrectomy, only the diseased or infected portion of the
kidney is removed. Radical nephrectomy involves removing the entire kidney, a section of
the tube leading to the bladder (ureter), the gland that sits atop the kidney (adrenal
gland), and the fatty tissue surrounding the kidney. A simple nephrectomy performed for
transplant purposes requires removal of the kidney and a section of the attached ureter. A
similar procedure is used to harvest cadaver kidneys, although both kidneys are typically
removed at once (bilateral nephrectomy) and blood and cell samples for tissue typing are
also taken.
The nephrectomy patient is administered general anesthesia and the surgeon makes an
incision on the side or front of the abdomen. Muscle, fat, and tissue are cut away to
reveal the kidney. The blood vessels connecting the kidney to the circulation are cut and
clamped. Depending on the type of nephrectomy procedure being performed, the ureter,
adrenal gland, and/or surrounding tissue may also be cut. The vessels and the ureter in
the patient are then tied off and the incision is sewn up (sutured). The surgical
procedure can take up to three hours, depending on the type of nephrectomy being
performed.
Laparoscopic nephrectomy is a form of minimally-invasive surgery that utilizes
instruments on long, narrow rods to view, cut, and remove the kidney. The surgeon views
the kidney and surrounding tissue with a flexible videoscope. The videoscope and surgical
instruments are maneuvered through four small incisions in the abdomen. Once the kidney is
freed, it is secured in a bag and pulled through a fifth incision, approximately 3 in (7.6
cm) wide, in the front of the abdominal wall below the navel. Although this surgical
technique takes slightly longer than a traditional nephrectomy, preliminary studies have
shown that it promotes a faster recovery time, shorter hospital stays, and less
post-operative pain for kidney donors. |