Please secure your spot by registering to attend this private event: Monarch Interactive Texas Style on Monday, May 20, 2019 at 5:00 pm. We look forward to seeing you there!
If you have any questions about the event, please contact Auris’s Marketing Specialist Nicki Pizzo or call (813) 340-5671.
944 S Lamar St, Dallas, TX 75202 Event starts: 5:00pm Located just 1 minute away from the Dallas Convention Center and Omni Dallas
Please join us for a casual evening with Stephen Kovacs, DO, FCCP of UPMC Hamot, who will discuss his case experience, the clinical impact to his practice and his patients. Dr Kovacs is one our more expereienced users. Dr Kovacs is an early adopter and one of our most experienced users with almost 100 cases.
GURU BARS on the Exhibitor Floor: Sunday, May 19 TITLE: Robotics and the Future of Lung Cancer Diagnosis: A Community Hospital's Experience with the Monarch Platform PRESENTER: Stephen Kovacs, MD
Monday, May 20 TITLE: Robotic-assisted bronchoscopy with the MONARCH™ platform: technical, pre-clinical and clinical consideration PRESENTER: Alex Chen, MD
Bronchoscopy:
Complications from bronchoscopy are rare and most often minor, but if they occur, may include breathing difficulty, vocal cord spasm, hoarseness, slight fever, vomiting, dizziness, bronchial spasm, infection, low blood oxygen, bleeding from biopsied site, or an allergic reaction to medications. Only rarely do patients experience other more serious complications (for example, collapsed lung, respiratory failure, heart attack and/or cardiac arrhythmia).
Urology:
Adverse effects from both Mini-PCNL and Ureteroscopy include pain, urinary tract infection, fever, hematuria (presence of blood in urine), exposure to low levels of radiation, retained or residual stones.
Adverse effects from ureteroscopy may include pain, perforation or injury to the ureter, resulting in extravasation of fluid and urine (urinoma), stricture of the ureter with risk of subsequent obstruction (hydronephrosis needing further repair), rare avulsion of the ureter, urinary blood clots, residual stones.
PCNL access may result in minor and major adverse effects. Minor effects include fever and nephrostomy leak. Major adverse effects may include injuries to pleura, liver, spleen, large vessels with related bleeding, gallbladder, duodenum, jejunum, colon with related cutaneous fistula, fever, pain, ileus, elevated counts.
Major adverse effects related to stone removal may include infection and urosepsis, intravascular fluid overload, extravasation of fluid, and post percutaneous nephrolithotomy bleeding.