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Waterbury
Hospital Physicians Successfully Perform Minimally
Invasive Procedure to Identify Lung Cancer
Using
Ultrasound technology, physicians are now able to
pinpoint cancerous cells without requiring surgery
WATERBURY
– Waterbury Hospital-affiliated physicians last week
successfully performed two Ultrasound Transbronchial
Biopsies, a highly-advanced, minimally invasive
procedure that allows physicians to pinpoint the
location of cancerous cells without requiring surgery.
Using advanced Ultrasound
technology that had previously been unavailable in the
Greater Waterbury Region, physicians from the practice
Pulmonary Associates of Waterbury were able to
successfully identify the exact locations of cancer
cells in two patients last week. One of the patients was
found to have lung cancer that required immediate
surgery.
“Before we had this
technology, we would not have been able to identify the
cancer as quickly and efficiently as we are now able
to,” said Carl B. Sherter, MD, Chief of the Pulmonary
Section at Waterbury Hospital. “Now that we’re able to
pinpoint signs of cancer with greater accuracy and
convenience, we will be able to save a lot more lives.”
The new Ultrasound device,
called an Endobronchial Ultrasound machine, or EBUS, was
purchased by the hospital five weeks ago. Previously,
patients in the Greater Waterbury Region had to go to
Hartford to take advantage of this technology. Two of
the physicians in the Waterbury practice, Elizabeth
Mirabile-Levens, MD, and Robert McDonald, MD, received
training on the device along with David Underhill, MD, a
thoracic surgeon affiliated with the hospital.
Dr. Sherter said the
technology is a complementary piece to the hospital’s
broad range of services for the diagnosis and treatment
of lung cancer. Another recently purchased device allows
physicians to isolate and examine individual layers of
cells to inspect for signs of cancer on a cell-by-cell
basis.
“We are very pleased to be
able to offer these kinds of services to our patients,”
said Steven Schneider, MD, Waterbury Hospital’s Vice
President of Medical Affairs. “Lung cancer is a very
serious health issue, which is why we are committed to
providing the highest quality care to our patients.”
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