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The patient's legs are strapped into boots on the table, which rotates the leg externally and extends the hip, dropping the foot toward the floor.
How surgeons can help more patients—On and off the operating table Surgeons have stressful, high-stakes jobs. Luckily, they receive years of academic and practical training to help them prepare.
Penn Highlands DuBois urologist John Banerji says investing in this technology will help better "locate and treat" cancers for kidneys, bladders, and prostates. “This table is around $500,000 to ...
The surgeon faced a dilemma: continue an operation that could kill an extremely sick patient on the operating table or sew the patient up, extending their life by only a few painful days at most ...
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