Robots Might Allow For Space Surgery 102
An anonymous reader writes "Robots might allow for delicate surgeries in space, reports the Washington Post." From the article: "The tiny, wheeled robots, which are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are equipped with cameras and lights and can send back images to surgeons. Others have surgical tools attached that can be controlled remotely ... Officials hope that next spring, NASA will teach astronauts to use the robots so that surgeries could one day be performed in space. Delays in communication because of the distance to space would mean surgeons on earth would have tell astronauts what commands to give the robots"
delay? (Score:4, Insightful)
Eh? (Score:1)
Re:Eh? (Score:2)
Gonner (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Gonner (Score:1)
What happens if the robot gets some tissue stuck in an axle. Wouldn't that be a bigger issue than most of the surguries requiring the bots?
I think we've successfully taken a step backwards.
Re:Gonner (Score:1)
I seem to remember that the maximum acceleration achievable by a wheeled vehicle is, in fact, Fg, where F is the coefficient of friction, and g is g.
Re:Gonner (Score:2)
Hey wait, are there stairs on spaceships?
ludicrous! (Score:3, Funny)
Space Surgery? (Score:5, Insightful)
_ _ _ _ _
Got Teeth?
http://www.doctorgallagher.com/ [doctorgallagher.com]
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:1)
Same is often done for scientists wintering in Antarctica.
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Would you want to get surgery from a doctor who hasn't done any surgery in 40 months? (18 there, 18 back, plus several months on Mar - emergency comes up just before you get back home, too urgent to wait) Particularly if the surgeon is not a specialist in that area?
These device seem like a much better idea, particularly if they come up with an "AI" that can do the more common surgeries without help once inserted.
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:3, Insightful)
With the amount it's costing and so forth, I'd want the very best scientists going along. As long as they're able to get there, all else is secondary. And as another reply said, a surgeon who isn't a specialist in your area, which is the best we can usu
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
My take is that they'll send a doctor along for the very reason you site, namely that they're sending along the best in a very expensive manner. It'll be stupid to kill someone that
Re:Mandate all 'nauts to be MDs, too (Score:2)
Yea, they probably will. Besides the doctor could be the one with the serious problem.
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Also, this device is also expected to be used in the battlefield, and I assume rescue operations and other remote circumstances. At $200 a robot, these are indeed sort of expensive (single use, often multiple robots per procedure) but not outrageous for certain uses.
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Some MDs are also PhDs; they focus on research and development, and not just cutting. Depending on their research specialties, some are highly talented physicists and chemists.
One would expect there to be significant cross-training of the entire Mars crew; a surgeon who went along would be expected to do useful work while he wasn't needed in his medical capacity (i.e
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:3, Insightful)
Outsourcing (Score:2)
After all, why would you hire the ludicrously expensive local surgeon when you can hire an equally-skilled Indian living in Bangalore (right next door to the Dell phone support center) to use these robots to work remotely.
Soon, you'll be able to have your surgery done at WalMart, and the only people they have to pay directly are the anesthesiologist and maybe a couple of post-op nurses.
Oh, and don't think that WalMart won
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
About the closest comparison to something on Earth would be the South Pole researchers, who are stuck there (particularly during the southern hemisphere's winter) w/out recourse to outside help. A little research drug (no pun intended) up a timeline [southpolestation.com] of events at the station. What's interesting from just a cursory review of it is the number of cases of apendicitis in the first few years of the station. There has also been at least one case [70south.com] of a torn knee tendon.
So in the space arena, whether it's requir
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Space Surgery? (Score:2)
Re:Delays in communication (Score:2)
Not to mention being able to communicate a series of critical instructions at the same time. "Make a cut there - but for the love of god don't cut " can be sent in one message to another person, but a surgeon on the groun
Re:Delays in communication (Score:2)
machines just can't operate at that level yet without a very predictable environment (which the human body isn't really). I'd think the surgon on earth would be giving high level commands (cut this,join that etc) and the astronoughts would be turning those into start cutting stop cutting etc.
OK, but (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:OK, but (Score:1)
Re:OK, but (Score:5, Informative)
The best part is that the controls can scale large movements down to very fine ones allowing procedures that aren't possible by hand, as well as filtering out normal muscle tremors. Though I'm with you, I'd like to see it used more often.
Re:OK, but (Score:2)
I bet it won't be long before they use it as a replacement for the 6-figure surgeon. Let the medical outsourcing begin!
And this would be bad how? (Score:2)
Re:And this would be bad how? (Score:2)
It's not bad. (Score:2)
Hahahahhahahahahahahahahahhahahahah. That's funny. Ooo wait. Your serious. That's not funny thats scary. If you actually delved a bit deeper into robotics technology you would discover that this wou
Re:It's not bad. (Score:2)
Re:It's not bad. (Score:2)
They always
Re:It's not bad. (Score:2)
I doubt it. Computing and Robotics will be so reliable in twenty years that the cost of having a surgeon physically standing by for every operation will likely be considered wasteful. Technicians can stablilize a patient in the (very) unlikely event that a communications/power/robotic system goes down as well as all redundant backups of that system. Then repairs take place or a qualified surgeon travels from somewhere else.
EMT's do not have the knowledge to save a person if a procedure
Remember HAL-9000? (Score:5, Funny)
Solving tomorrow's problems today. (Score:5, Insightful)
Rrright. I'm glad we're solving *tomorrow's* problems today. Shouldn't we first actually get a space program?
Better than the day after we need them (Score:2)
I would much prefer these problems solved before we go. I'd hate to be on a trip to mars, and die on the way because nobody knows how to do some surgery that I unexpectedly need. I want all bases covered, with enough redundancy that if something goes wrong it isn't fatal.
Remember Apollo 13? Something like that could not be recovered from on the way to mars, so they have to have other way to recover. There are plenty of other disasters that could happen that need to be planed for. (with enough suppl
Re:Solving tomorrow's problems today. (Score:2)
latency (Score:5, Interesting)
also, low gravity surgery would require new techical skills. we actually depend on gravity to keep bowel from floating around and obscuring our view. what do bleeders look like in low-gravity? for the mars mission, will people just have their gallbladder, appendix and uterus out before the trip?
Re:latency (Score:2)
Re:latency (Score:2)
Of course then you have the lack of a medical team, "nurses" with little experience, lack of the optimal equipment, and probably
Re:latency (Score:2)
I agree with your conclusion - I would have the GB and appy out prophylactically before I set off on such a mission.
Re:latency (Score:1)
Rama II (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Rama II (Score:2)
"Appendicitis" is a condition (swollen/inflamed appendix), an "appendectomy" is a surgical procedure to remove an appendix.
Re:Rama II (Score:1)
My bad.
Re:Rama II (Score:2)
Lipstick (Score:4, Funny)
Oh come on, Slashdotters are supposed to know how big a lipstick case is?
Re:Lipstick (Score:2)
Re:Lipstick (Score:2)
A quick trip upstairs should prove informative.
Huey and Duey can do it! (Score:2)
Say what you want about the eco-hippie theme, that movie had some nice AI concepts.
Re:Huey and Duey can do it! (Score:2)
Re:Huey and Duey can do it! (Score:2)
I seem to remember Bruce Dern using a soldering iron to hard wire surgical skills into his drone.
Re:Huey and Duey can do it! (Score:1)
Pushing will protect you... (Score:2)
How Nice of Them. (Score:2)
Connection issues... (Score:2)
Surgery in space performed by robots. (Score:1)
Silent Running. [imdb.com]
Units 101 before we play doctor (Score:1)
Delay? (Score:2, Redundant)
And issuing the command to a human who then has to issue the command to a robot will somehow introduce less delay than the surgeon issuing the command directly?
The Matrix (Score:2, Funny)
Ob. Trek (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ob. Trek (Score:1)
I for one,RTFA - Robots May Allow Surgery in Space (Score:1)
Yea, the actual title of the article is poorly written: "Robots May Allow Surgery in Space"
not good enough (Score:2)
Inverted Priorities (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider the relative difficulty of invasive surgery in comparison to installing a PCI card or changing the lubricant in an automobile. Repair work on a machine (which can have been intentionally designed for easy servicing) is incomprably simpler than trying to heal a live human by cutting her up.
The differences are magnified at orbital or interplanetary distances, were telecommunications lag comes into play. Even a few seconds delay between commands could have a human patient bleeding to death, but machines can be powered down before maintenance, meaning NASA can easily take 60 minutes to direct each individual step (and then wait the same time to get images of the result).
Once we've got robots that can reliably fix a flat-tire by transcontinental remote-control, then we can start to think about robosurgery. Walk before you can run; solder before you can suture.
(Furthermore, if something goes wrong, a dead astronaut killed by a misaligned surgeon-bot is more expensive than a satellite disabled by a mechanic-bot, once all the costs from negative publicity have been factored in)
65 comments and no one.. (Score:1)
Granted, the interface would probably have each robot indicated as to status (in body or out) and it might not be an issue, but there's always the possibility of sensor or total failure.
Also, if one were left ins
Bad robot (Score:2, Funny)
"got the sack" [wikipedia.org] Brit slang
automatic process already (Score:1)
http://agdb.net.ru/images/system_shock_1.jpg [agdb.net.ru]
Give him some Hundreds and Thousands! (Score:2)
Space? What about here on earth! (Score:1)
Don't get me wrong: I work in spaceresearch at the moment. But this is ridiculous. We've got tens of thousands of people right here on *earth* in need of surgeons every day.
Couldn't this tech be used in places like Pakistan [google.com], like, tomorrow?
Am I missing something? (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be easier to just train the astronauts to perform surgery themselves? Saves you the cost of developing the robot. Is there any reason to suspect that guiding a surgeon robot will require less skill than doing the cutting by hand?
Sounds to me like someone desperately trying to justify NASA funding for a worthwhile research project that doesn't have anything at all to do with the space program. (No
Yes you are missing two important concepts (Score:2)
Robots can filter out extraneous signals like a shaking hand which is extremely useful for surgeons whose hands shake. Im pretty sure that this will account for major whoops moments that someone who isn't a surgeon will experience. Also, another advantage to robotic su
finally (Score:1)