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Get Innovative Surgery Options for Lung & Chest Conditions at Mayo Clinic

Choose Mayo Clinic's Division of Thoracic Surgery in Arizona for innovative treatment and advanced surgical options for diseases of the chest, including the lungs, airway, chest wall, esophagus and the upper abdomen.

Our surgeons offer proven expertise in minimally invasive surgical techniques, including advanced laparoscopic surgery, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) and robotic surgery. These approaches lead to superior outcomes and can mean a shorter hospital stay, faster recovery time, and fewer complications after surgery. We also offer innovative pain control with cryoablation. 

Experts in Comprehensive Thoracic Care
Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Ariz. has been ranked the #1 hospital in Arizona for 11 consecutive years, and is top ranked in Pulmonology & Lung Surgery by U.S. News & World Report.

Rare is not rare for us, and we routinely treat highly complex conditions. You’ll have a multidisciplinary team that may include thoracic surgeons, radiologists, pathologists, pulmonologists, gastroenterologists, and oncologists – all working together with you on a treatment plan that meets your goals and needs.

Innovative and Advanced Options
You’ll have advanced options for many conditions, including:

Lung

•     Lung effusions or fluid

•     Lung nodules or cancer

•     Mesothelioma or pleural tumors

•     Valley Fever

Chest wall

•     Chest wall tumors

•     Pectus excavatum and carinatum

•     Rib fractures

•     Rib tumors

•     Thoracic outlet syndrome

Mediastinum

•     Mediastinal tumors

•     Thymus tumors and thymoma

Diaphragm

•     Diaphragm hernia

•     Diaphragm paralysis and elevation

•     Diaphragm plication and pacing

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Or call 480-342-2270. M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mountain

Thoracic surgery is the name for the specialty that treats all sorts of disease processes in the chest. We're not focusing primarily on the heart, we're treating all of the other organs in the chest such as lungs, esophagus, thymus, chest wall, ribs, any place that we can have an abnormality, we're here to offer treatment. 

Traditionally for lung surgery we used to make an open incision and spread the ribs to adequately access the lung for removal. The risk of having post thoracotomy pain or pain lasting for longer than three months was unfortunately higher than we would like. Here at our institution, we've been using robotic surgery as a form of minimally invasive surgery for thoracic to create less pain for patients, reduced hospital time, and overall faster recovery. Robotics thoracic surgery offers advancements that other minimally invasive platforms don't have. Increased visual optics, as well as increased precision with the instrument movements. All of these things that allow us to do more technically challenging cases and offer a wider variety of patients access to minimally invasive surgery. Focusing on small incisions where there's no spreading of the ribs whatsoever significantly reduces that pain along the chest wall for patients.

Of the many different diseases and the chest which are treatable with robotic thoracic surgery, the most common one that we treat is lung cancer. Lung cancer is the number one cause of cancer-related deaths each year. One of the reasons that lung cancer is the number one cancer killer for men and women in the United States is because lung cancer tends to be found at a later stage. The reason for that is early stage lung cancers, patients generally have no symptoms. So if they have a nodule or a lung mass, if they're in the periphery or the outer part of the lung, patients won't have any symptoms at all until they get big enough to cause a pneumonia or some bleeding or something along those lines. 

Here at Mayo Clinic, we're really focused on providing comprehensive cancer care for lung cancer. And that includes everything from lung cancer screening, which can be the first step to diagnostic workup, including a biopsy all the way through surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation treatments. What robotic bronchoscopy has allowed us to do is to drive as far into the periphery of the airways, into the periphery of the lung as we want to with vision. The vision, in my opinion with robotic bronchoscopy has made all the difference in the world. We're able to actually get to lesions that are smaller than we would have ever even tried before. 

I lost my mother, my father, my sister and my brother and they’re all in their 40s and 50s from lung cancer. So it's just one of those things you just wait to hear that you have it. And that was pretty devastating. But when I saw Dr. Beamer and found out that they can do robotic surgery, I knew I was in the right hands. I live each day as if it's the fullest. I learned that early in life because of losing my mother. She had to have her lung removed. But back then they didn't do robotic surgery. So that was major surgery. I remember her being tied up for quite a while. And with robotic surgery, this is no lie, I went to Disney two weeks later with my grandkids. So that goes to show you. 

We're getting to the point where we can treat smaller and smaller lung cancers. And what gives me hope is that we're going to have a cure for lung cancer in my lifetime. I believe that. Robotic surgery is transforming the thoracic surgery experience from smaller incisions, shorter hospital times to quicker recovery and people regaining their life back. We are focused on providing high-quality care for our patients and we are excited about the future in lung cancer care.

I can't say enough about my surgeons and my entire care teams at Mayo Clinic. In addition to everything else, I love their coordination of care, and how everyone is on the same team and the same page at all times.

— Joyce

Why Choose Mayo Clinic?

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  • Unparalleled Expertise