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Silver Leaf Clinic · Hadapsar, Pune · Colorectal & GI Cancer Centre
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da Vinci Xi · Colon & Rectal Cancer

Robotic Pelvic Surgery

Robotic Colorectal Cancer Surgery · Pune

The pelvis is the hardest place in the abdomen to operate — a deep, narrow bony funnel packed with the rectum, delicate nerves that control continence, bladder and sexual function, and major blood vessels. It is precisely here that the robot transforms what is possible. The da Vinci Xi gives the surgeon a magnified 3-D view and wristed, tremor-free instruments that reach deep into the pelvis where the human hand and straight laparoscopic tools struggle. Dr. Vinod T. Gore, FARIS-trained (Edinburgh), performs the full range of robotic colon and rectal cancer operations with nerve-sparing precision.

da Vinci Xi Full Colorectal Range Nerve-Sparing TME ICG Guided
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Dr. Vinod T. Gore
Add a da Vinci console / pelvic dissection photo here (9:16 portrait)
The Challenge of the Pelvis

Why the robot is made for pelvic surgery

Operating on rectal cancer means working at the very bottom of a deep, bony funnel that narrows as it goes — especially in men and in a narrow pelvis. Wrapped around the rectum are the autonomic nerves that control the bladder, sexual function and the anal sphincter, and major blood vessels that must not be injured. The cancer operation must remove the rectum and its lymph-node-bearing envelope (the mesorectum) completely and intact, while sparing all of this.

Doing this through a large open incision means operating deep in shadow, by feel as much as sight. Straight laparoscopic instruments cannot angle into the depths of the pelvis. The robot solves both problems at once.

At the console, the surgeon has a brightly lit, ten-times magnified 3-D view right down to the pelvic floor, and instruments that bend and rotate like a wrist to work around corners no straight tool can reach. Tremor is filtered out, so dissection along the precise nerve-sparing planes is steady and exact.

The outcome is a better, cleaner total mesorectal excision (TME), more reliable nerve preservation, and — for the patient — less blood loss, less pain and a faster recovery. For pelvic cancer surgery, this is where robotics makes its single biggest difference.

Want the full robotic story?
This page covers robotic colon and rectal (pelvic) cancer surgery in depth. For Dr. Gore's complete robotic programme — the da Vinci Xi technology, his FARIS (Edinburgh) training and the full breadth of robotic operations — visit our dedicated robotic surgery website.
Visit Robotic Surgery Site ↗ Robotic GI Surgery (Upper GI) →
Advantages in the Pelvis

What the robot delivers

Every advantage of the robotic platform counts double in the confined space of the pelvis.

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Visualisation deep in the pelvis
A magnified, brightly lit 3-D view reaches the narrow depths of the bony pelvis that are dark and hard to see in open surgery — the single biggest gain.
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Nerve identification & preservation
The autonomic nerves controlling continence, bladder and sexual function are seen clearly and protected — lowering the risk of urinary and sexual dysfunction.
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Wristed instruments around corners
Instruments that bend like a wrist work into the depths of the pelvis where straight laparoscopic tools simply cannot angle.
Tremor-free precision
Steady, filtered movement allows exact dissection along the fine TME planes, close to nerves and vessels.
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Less blood loss
Precise dissection in the right planes means minimal bleeding and a clear operating field.
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Less pain & faster recovery
Small incisions mean less pain and trauma, earlier mobilisation and a quicker return to normal life.
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Shorter hospital & ICU stay
Less physiological stress and faster recovery translate into shorter hospital and intensive-care stays.
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Smaller incisions, less trauma
A few keyhole ports replace a long incision — less wound pain, fewer wound problems and a better cosmetic result.
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Built-in ICG fluorescence
Integrated ICG checks the blood supply of the join and maps anatomy in real time — see our ICG page.
Robotic Colon Operations

The full range of robotic colectomy

Whichever part of the colon is affected, the corresponding resection can be performed robotically — with complete mesocolic excision and proper lymph node clearance.

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Robotic colorectal dissection
Add a robotic pelvic / colonic dissection image here (16:9 landscape)
Robotic colon resections
OperationFor tumours in…What is done
Right hemicolectomyCaecum & ascending colonRight colon removed with complete mesocolic excision and central (D2/D3) node clearance; intracorporeal join
Left hemicolectomyDescending colonLeft colon removed with its mesocolon and nodes; colon rejoined
Transverse colectomyTransverse colonMid-colon segment removed with its lymphatic drainage
Sigmoid colectomySigmoid colonSigmoid removed with high vascular ligation and node clearance; colorectal join
Total proctocolectomyWhole colon & rectum
(e.g. FAP, synchronous tumours)
Entire colon and rectum removed, with reconstruction (pouch) or end stoma as appropriate

All robotic colectomies aim for complete mesocolic excision (CME) with central node clearance — the colon equivalent of a good TME — for the best oncological result. ICG confirms bowel perfusion before each join.

Robotic Rectal Operations

Rectal cancer — precision where it matters most

Rectal surgery is where robotic precision is most valuable. Every operation below is built on a meticulous, nerve-sparing total mesorectal excision (TME) — the foundation of both cure and good function.

TME
Total Mesorectal Excision — the foundation
The rectum and its surrounding mesorectal envelope are removed intact along precise embryological planes, sparing the pelvic nerves. A clean TME is the strongest predictor of both cancer cure and preserved continence, bladder and sexual function — and it is exactly what the robot does best deep in the pelvis.
AR
Anterior Resection (AR)
For upper and mid-rectal tumours: the affected rectum is removed and the colon rejoined to the remaining rectum, preserving the sphincter and natural route.
LAR
Low Anterior Resection (LAR)
For lower rectal tumours: a lower join (colorectal or colo-anal) preserves the sphincter. A temporary covering ileostomy usually protects the new join while it heals.
ISR
Intersphincteric Resection (ISR)
For very low tumours close to the sphincter: the internal sphincter is removed with the tumour while the external sphincter is preserved, then the colon is joined to the anal canal — saving natural control where a permanent stoma once seemed inevitable. The robot's reach makes this demanding dissection safer.
APR
Abdominoperineal Resection (APR)
When the tumour involves the sphincter and cannot be removed with a clear margin otherwise, the rectum and anus are removed and a permanent colostomy created. Robotic dissection still benefits the abdominal and pelvic part of the operation.
Nerve-sparing TME Anterior resection LAR · colo-anal ISR APR Covering ileostomy ICG perfusion check

Closely related: Sphincter Preservation, Stoma Care & Reversal, and the Rectal Cancer condition page.

ICG Fluorescence

Seeing blood supply & anatomy in real time

The da Vinci Xi has ICG fluorescence built in, and it is especially valuable in colorectal surgery.

Perfusion
Checking the join before committing
A poorly perfused join is the main cause of an anastomotic leak. ICG lets the surgeon confirm both ends have a healthy blood supply before joining — and change the plan if not — reducing leak risk.
Resection line
Choosing where to divide
ICG shows exactly where blood supply is healthy, so the bowel is divided and joined in well-perfused tissue.
Nodes
Lymphatic & node mapping
ICG can map lymphatic drainage to guide accurate node dissection.
Structures
Protecting ureters
With specific techniques, ICG can highlight the ureters, helping protect them during pelvic dissection.

Read more on our dedicated ICG Fluorescence page.

Robotic vs Open — Pelvis

What it means for you

A balanced summary for colorectal cancer surgery. The robot is an outstanding tool in suitable cases; the right approach is always chosen for the individual patient and tumour.

Robotic vs open — colorectal (pelvic) cancer surgery
FactorRobotic (da Vinci Xi)Open surgery
Vision in the pelvisMagnified 3-D, lit to the pelvic floorDeep, shadowed, harder to see
Nerve preservationNerves clearly seen & sparedEffective but more difficult deep down
Reach into the pelvisWristed instruments angle inLimited by the bony funnel
Blood lossTypically lessMore in deep dissection
Pain & incisionsSmall ports, less painLong incision, more pain
Hospital & ICU stayUsually shorterOften longer
RecoveryFaster return to normalSlower
Cancer outcome (TME quality)Equivalent or betterProven, equivalent

For the situations where open surgery is the safer choice — bulky, locally advanced or emergency disease — see our Open Cancer Surgery page. The best approach is always individualised.

Patient Questions

Robotic pelvic surgery — answered plainly

No. The robot never moves on its own. Every movement is controlled in real time by Dr. Gore at a console beside you. The system translates his hand movements into smaller, steadier, more precise movements inside the pelvis. The surgeon is fully in control throughout.
Because the rectum sits deep in a narrow bony pelvis surrounded by delicate nerves. The robot's magnified 3-D view and wristed instruments reach and see into that confined space far better than open or straight laparoscopic surgery — giving a cleaner nerve-sparing TME, which protects continence, bladder and sexual function while removing the cancer completely.
It can help. The precision of robotic dissection supports sphincter-preserving operations like LAR and ISR, even for low tumours, so a permanent stoma is needed less often. Whether your sphincter can be saved depends on the tumour's position and margins — see our Sphincter Preservation page.
Yes. For suitable colorectal cancers, robotic surgery gives equivalent — and for the quality of TME and nerve preservation, often better — results than open surgery, with less pain and faster recovery. Complete, margin-clear removal with proper node clearance remains the priority, and the robot helps achieve it.
Most patients having robotic colorectal surgery have less pain, mobilise earlier, eat sooner and go home faster than after open surgery, with shorter hospital and ICU stays. Exact timing depends on the operation and your overall health, but the smaller incisions and reduced trauma make a real difference.
This page covers robotic colon and rectal (pelvic) surgery. For Dr. Gore's full robotic programme — the da Vinci Xi technology, his FARIS (Edinburgh) training and the complete range of robotic operations — please visit our dedicated robotic surgery website, bestroboticsurgeonpune.in.

This page is general information, not personal medical advice. Whether robotic surgery is right for you depends on your tumour and overall health, decided at a multidisciplinary tumour board. Please bring all scans and reports to your consultation.

Silver Leaf Clinic · Hadapsar, Pune

Ask about robotic colorectal surgery

If you or a family member has colon or rectal cancer, Dr. Gore can advise whether robotic pelvic surgery is the best approach — and whether the sphincter can be preserved. Please bring all CT/MRI/PET scans, colonoscopy and biopsy reports, and any previous operative notes — ideally on CD or shared via WhatsApp in advance.

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