Home > Physician Directory > Michael S. Mulligan, MD
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VATS allows doctors to perform chest surgery through a series of small incisions. A camera inserted through one incision guides their work. The procedure is much less invasive than traditional open-chest surgery, which requires cutting through or spreading open the rib cage and cutting extensively through muscle. People who undergo VATS spend less time in the hospital, need less pain medication and recover much faster.
VATS anatomic lung resections are available at only about 30 centers in the country, including UWMC.
In a routine lung resection, surgeons usually follow a standard sequence of steps to hone in on the target area and cut it out, explains Mulligan. Some are more rigid about following these steps. With his extensive lung transplant experience, Mulligan felt comfortable beginning to deviate from the sequence years ago in the interest of preserving his patients’ tissue.
“I started using smaller and smaller incisions because of a heightened awareness of where things are in three dimensions,” he says.
For instance, after making a traditional skin incision, Mulligan would shift muscles out of the way, rather than cutting clean through them. Knowing he’d need to place drainage tubes in the chest at the end of the surgery, he performed surgery through the small drainage incisions from the outset when he could.
“Why wouldn’t we do on our patients what we would want on ourselves?” Mulligan asks. “We don’t just want to help patients survive, we want them to live and enjoy as much physical capacity as possible. For some, who enjoy athletics or just being active, one has to try to preserve muscular and skeletal integrity.”
Besides performing surgery and directing the UWMC Lung Transplant Program, Mulligan is an associate professor in cardiothoracic surgery at UW. He has earned numerous teaching and research awards, belongs to a variety of professional associations for thoracic surgeons, and is among the youngest members ever elected to the American Surgical Association.
After earning his medical degree, Mulligan completed a general surgery residency at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City. He also completed two years of postdoctoral research training in lung immunobiology at the University of Michigan, as well as fellowships in heart and lung transplantation, cardiothoracic surgery and general thoracic surgery. Currently his research at UW focuses on acute and chronic rejection and tissue injury associated with lung transplantation.
When he’s not operating, teaching, researching, or training for waterskiing competition, Mulligan cares for his two sons, with his wife Lisa Mulligan, M.D., who has a private practice in Renton and Issaquah in ear, nose, and throat surgery.
Read the stories of these SCCA patients who have had VATS performed by Mulligan:
* Warren Bailey, who has leiomyosarcoma.
* Diana Rogers, who has lung cancer.
Learn about VATS in this KING 5 TV Special.
Connect with Patient Power, a talk show that represents the patient’s point of view.
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Seattle Cancer Care Alliance unites the doctors from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, UW Medicine, and Seattle Children's to form a world-class treatment center that provides advanced therapies and clinical studies for cancers and other blood disorders.
