‘Our patients should feel confident that they will benefit from latest surgical advances when they come to our hospitals’

Patients at Hull Royal Infirmary are set to benefit from a revolutionary form of keyhole surgery. According to the NHS Humber Health Partnership, patients with spinal disorders and degenerative spine conditions will now be able to get state-of-the-art spinal surgery after a major investment in a Mobile Imaging System (MIS).

The hospital’s skilled team of neurosurgeons can now perform Endoscopic Spine Surgery (ESS). The NHS said this is a minimally invasive surgical technique where a small probe and camera is used through a keyhole incision to perform surgery as a day case procedure.

Mr Shuaibu Dambatta, Consultant in Neurosurgery at Hull Royal Infirmary who performs complex spinal surgeries, said: “Our patients should feel confident that they will benefit from latest surgical advances when they come to our hospitals.

“Instead of making large incisions, we can make much smaller cuts, less than the size of a finger, to operate on the spine so it’s a much better, safer and less traumatic experience for patients. As the cuts are so small, the surgery is far less invasive and safer for patients, who can have the surgery as a day case, with most able to go home that same day to begin their recovery.”

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NHS Humber Health Partnership purchased the equipment, complete with a special set and scope, thanks to the generosity of independent hospital charity WISHH and Ruth and Tony Knowles. They have raised more than £176,000 for the team in memory of her daughter Emma-Jayne, who died of a brain tumour two weeks before her 23rd birthday in 1998.

The couple, of Sutton on Sea in Lincolnshire, were awarded the British Empire Medal in the New Year’s Honours List in 2014. Although Mr Knowles sadly died last year, Mrs Knowles has continued to fundraise and was at the hospital recently to learn about the new equipment.

She said: “Every year, I speak to the neurosurgical team and I ask them what equipment they might be looking to purchase that year, and what would benefit patients most. They come back with a list of equipment, we have a chat and then we look to make that happen.

“It’s always nice to be invited back to Hull Royal; it’s fantastic to see the equipment that’s been purchased and hear about what it can do, but it’s great just to see all the neurosurgical team too, they’re such a fantastic, dedicated group of people.

“We’ve been fundraising now for 27 years and in that time, we’ve raised a total of £176,081.50. Tony and I always said that fundraising won’t bring Emma-Jayne back, but what we can do is help the neurosurgical team to help other people.”

Sue Lockwood, WISHH Charity Chairperson, said: “The WISHH Charity welcomed the opportunity to support the Knowles family and the Neurosurgical Department to make this new minimally invasive procedure a reality in Hull. This is a procedure which will benefit many patients in the coming years, and it is only thanks to the support and generosity of local people that the WISHH Charity has the funds to support such initiatives.”

As well as the new equipment, the organisation, which runs Hull Royal, Castle Hill Hospital, Goole and District Hospital, Diana, Princess of Wales Hospital in Grimsby and Scunthorpe General Hospital, has also been able to purchase a computer model of the spine called an UpSurgeon Trainer, which will be used to train doctors in the new form of the surgery.

Consultant Neurosurgeon Mr Chittoor Rajaraman said: “At a time when the NHS continues to face significant challenges — particularly from a financial perspective — WISHH and the Knowles family have gone above and beyond to help us secure this vital equipment. We are extremely grateful for their contribution.”

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