Surgeons use robots to operate on pigs from 500 miles away

John Yellig, IoT World Today

July 4, 2024

1 Min Read
Surgeons use robots to operate on pigs from 500 miles away

Surgeons recently performed a series of successful medical operations on pigs from 500 miles away using robotic-assisted surgery (RAS).

The preclinical tests of the Sovato Platform were carried out by doctors in Lincoln, Nebraska, who operated on subjects in Chicago. Nephrectomy, hysterectomy, colectomy and cholecystectomy procedures were successfully completed using the new software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform, which was paired with Virtual Incision’s MIRA Surgical System, billed by the company as the world’s first miniaturized RAS device.

The Sovato platform remotely connects surgeons in one location to patients, operating rooms and staff in another. It can be paired with any RAS device — in the demonstration’s case, a modified version of MIRA — to control the device’s surgical arms and an integrated articulating camera in the operating theater for “full situational awareness.” The platform also provides surgeons with clinical workflows, data, supporting infrastructure and a fiberoptic network.

“I could not tell the difference between doing surgery in my operating room or in an operating room that was 500 miles away,” said one of the surgeons, Francesco Bianco, associate professor of surgery at the University of Illinois, Chicago.

“The experience was seamless,” added Bianco, who presented the test results at the Society of Robotic Surgery 2024 Annual Meeting in Orlando, Florida. “There was no detectable delay. There was absolute comfort in communicating with the team on the remote side. Everything looked like a normal day in my operating room.”

To read the complete article, visit IoT World Today.

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