Robotic surgery
Robotic adrenalectomy
Minimally invasive removal of an adrenal gland may be discussed for selected adrenal masses or hormone-producing tumors after imaging and hormone testing are reviewed.
What patients are usually trying to decide
Patients usually want to know whether a robotic approach fits their diagnosis, anatomy, recovery goals, and surgeon experience.
A urologist may review diagnosis, imaging, anatomy, prior surgeries, procedure alternatives, expected recovery, and surgeon volume.
Where this fits in urology care
This page is part of Robotic and minimally invasive surgery, under Robotic adrenal surgery. Use it to understand the care area before a visit, then talk with a urologist about whether it fits your situation.
Questions to ask before scheduling
- Am I a candidate for this procedure or category of care?
- What testing or records should I bring to the visit?
- What are the main alternatives and why might one fit better?
- What should make me call urgently instead of waiting?
New Jersey appointment path
Talk with a urologist about Robotic adrenalectomy
Start with the practice directly. Do not send sensitive medical details through public forms; the office can move the conversation into the right intake process.
