As Joe Lessman readied his accounting business for the start of tax season last year, he agonized over his doctor's recommendation that he have open surgery to remove a cancerous prostate. Lessman is one of hundreds of thousands of patients across the country to undergo robotic surgery in recent years. Since the first device was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1999, robotic surgery has grown rapidly and is now used in dozens of procedures. Among the most common are removal of the gall bladder, uterus, prostate, kidney, and uterine fibroids, as well as gastric bypass and mitral-valve repair.
Every five minutes someone is diagnosed with colon cancer - making it the third most common type of cancer in the U.S. But for some patients, colon cancer may also be a sign of more trouble to come. A new study shows that a considerable number of patients also have a genetic condition known as Lynch Syndrome. What does this mean to those patients and their families? And why are experts urging every colon cancer patient to get tested? This cancer video is posted by Ohio State University