Inside the obturator canal: robotic ganglion cyst decompression.

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AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06+body, 2026-06-06

This study demonstrates a robotic approach for minimally invasive, nerve-preserving decompression and excision of a ganglion cyst within the obturator canal, supported by multidisciplinary planning.

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AI-generated deep summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-06 · read from full text

This paper reports on a 47-year-old woman with left groin and medial thigh pain and impaired leg function due to a 16-mm lobulated ganglion cyst extending into the left obturator foramen, inseparable from the obturator nerve and associated with neurogenic edema in obturator externus/adductor muscles. Using MDT planning, the authors describe a joint robotic pelvic approach in which surgeons developed an avascular plane, performed nerve-sparing neurolysis, carried out controlled cystotomy and decompression, and then deroofed and removed the cyst wall to reduce recurrence. They conclude that robotic access can enable minimally invasive, nerve-preserving excision with symptomatic and motor improvement, while the single-case design and rarity of the lesion limit generalizability. This paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Abstract

Background Obturator nerve compression is an uncommon cause of groin and medial thigh pain. Ganglion cysts extending into the obturator foramen are rare and usually managed via open or orthopaedic approaches. Robotic Neuropelveology offers high-definition access to pelvic neurovascular structures and may facilitate nerve-preserving excision.

Objectives

To demonstrate a robotic pelvic approach to the obturator foramen for excision of a ganglion cyst inseparable from the obturator nerve, and to highlight multidisciplinary (MDT) planning in atypical neuropathic pelvic pain. Participant A 47-year-old woman presented with left groin/medial thigh pain and impaired leg function. MRI showed a 16-mm lobulated ganglion cyst arising from the undersurface of the left hip joint and extending into the left obturator foramen, inseparable from the obturator nerve with neurogenic oedema in obturator externus/adductor muscles. Intervention After MDT planning with radiology, neurosurgeon, neuropelveology and gynaecology surgeon, a joint robotic procedure was performed. Key steps: develop an avascular pelvic sidewall plane via the lumbosacral space; dissect caudally to the obturator canal with minimal traction; identify the obturator nerve and vein and perform nerve-sparing neurolysis; perform controlled cystotomy and evacuate gelatinous contents for decompression; deroof the ganglion and remove the cyst wall to reduce recurrence.

Conclusions

Robotic access to the obturator foramen can enable minimally invasive, nerve-preserving decompression and excision of selected pelvic nerve compression lesions, supported by MDT planning, with symptomatic and motor improvement. What is New? A stepwise robotic route to the obturator canal for a ganglion cyst inseparable from the obturator nerve, demonstrating MDT-enabled management of rare neuropathic pelvic pain.

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last seen: 2026-06-04T01:30:01.192114+00:00