Surgical Robot Removes Calgary Woman's Brain Tumor 107
Raver32 points out an article in the Victoria Times Colonist about an interesting advance in robotic surgery: "Calgary doctors have made surgical history, using a robot to remove a brain tumor from a 21-year-old woman. Doctors used remote controls and an imaging screen, similar to a video game, to guide the two-armed robot through Paige Nickason's brain during the nine-hour surgery Monday. Surgical instruments acting as the hands of the robot — called NeuroArm — provided surgeons with the tools needed to successfully remove the egg-shaped tumor."
This wasn't there first attempt... (Score:5, Funny)
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Regardless, it's not a robot, it's a remote controlled McStabbyThing with a camera on it. Still cool though.
Re:This wasn't there first attempt... (Score:5, Funny)
More Info. (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ucalgary.ca/news/may2008/neuroArm [ucalgary.ca]
I think it will be interesting if a doctor can have less fatigue and sit in a chair and do operations more quickly and more precisely with this.
I understand that there are some operations where you would want the doctor to be on site to help with complications. But some of them like removing a brain tumor where its a procedure that you just need to cut something out it might be able to help the limited supply of doctors in the world be better utilized.
Re:More Info. (Score:4, Informative)
Easy. Just cutting something out...of the brain. (Score:5, Funny)
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Ancient Brain Surgery [scientificblogging.com]
I need trepanning like a hole in the head.
More to the point... (Score:5, Interesting)
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It's to allow surgeons to operate from home, to save gas and scrubs and they also don't need to wash their hands.
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They've also proposed to develop molecular probes that the robot can use to chemically feel out which tissue is likely to be tumor and which is not.
Re:More Info. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Hence I guess it's trivial technology. We already know how to fly to Mars... Trival. Really!
I thought building it would be more like Astrophysics.
did they tell her? (Score:2)
At the end of the day, hopefully this means cheap healthcare.
Re:did they tell her? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:did they tell her? (Score:5, Funny)
Needless to say I'm a beer drinker (belgian beers).
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Remember, there is no such thing as "Free health care" or "Free education". Thinking like that leads to arguments like "Well, it's not that good but I can't complain as it's free.". You are paying for it every time you pay taxes.
This naturally assuming you aren't circumventing your taxes some way or are posting from prison where you don't pay taxes but get health care or something like that.
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Do you mean "have the effect of lowering healthcare costs in Canada", or "the use of robots will make the concept of universal healthcare appealing to citizens of the United States and South Africa"?
Sorry, couldn't resist.
Damn (Score:2)
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Oblig. (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Oblig. (Score:5, Funny)
This is TOO FAR! We =must= take a stand! This far, no further!
In fact, I'm going to go give these overlords a piece of my mind in person! BRB
Re:Oblig. (Score:4, Funny)
I, too, WELCOME our BRAIN-surgeon ROBOT overlords.
All GLORY to THE brain-SURGEON robot OVERLORDS!
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Victoria Times Colonist (Score:1, Funny)
It's Not a Robot (Score:5, Informative)
... It's a Waldo (Score:5, Interesting)
(I just noticed the Waldo story reference has something which prefigures Feynmann's "Plenty of Room at the Bottom" . Wonder if he got that idea from Heinlein?
Andy
Im a doctor not a video gamer! (Score:4, Insightful)
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I can't remember the details offhand, but IIRC they tested gamers, experienced surgeons and trainees on a simulated surgery. The gamers did very well.
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Because video games help with this. (Score:2)
Perhaps because playing video games has been found [msn.com] to [shortnews.com] help [engadget.com] surgeons [wired.com] perform surgery better.
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Yeah! it's a space-age station for Oncology! And the doctor shoots first.
Agreed (Score:1)
Which has more advantages? (Score:1)
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Bacon? (Score:1)
Oh wait. The operation was successful. If it thought the patient was bacon then it would use more vet techniques.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Re: waiting lists (Score:1, Informative)
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Waiting lists are for elective procedures, like getting your hip replaced. Sure, it would be NICE to have a new hip in time for golf season, but missing a few tee times won't kill you.
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The point is that health care is NOT free in Canada. This is a popular misconception (or lie as some would argue) perpetuated by some
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ok so it removed the brain tumor... (Score:1)
Sick bunny (Score:5, Funny)
...Robot? (Score:2)
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Soon we can be on a honda assembly line
The Soviets did this for eye surgery decades ago. They would have patients on a carousel with surgeons each applying one step of the surgery. Then the entire patient carousel would shift with the next surgeons applying their one step to the next patient.
This is great (Score:5, Interesting)
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Not putting it down.. much nicer to tell the arm to start a cut at point A and a specific depth and end at point B.. I had some repair work done on my knee, and I have an extremely long scar.. did he start at the wrong place and just keep going till he found what he was looking for ?? don't really know, and better I don't think about it too much...
As I have done some CAD/CAM work before this is interestin
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Next thing, it will be offshored - then automated. That is, unless the "surgeon unions" have something to say about it...
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That is, they currently are making significant mistakes, and that there are more complex operations that they'd like to do but currently cannot.
Those assumptions sound reasonable to me.
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Just think how much of a boon this is for microsurgeons - folks who stitch together nerves, small blood vessels, etc. Hand tremor and even its inherent precision is no longer an issue. Plus, you can have more than two "hands". This will only get better, and eventually we'll probably see minor surgeries performed without any human intervention.
Is there really any doubt that as time moves forward minor, and then major, surgeries are going to be more automated all the time?
The interesting question for me is not if but how fast this happens. It seems likely that in just 15 years, 30 at the insanely litigious most, you could have one talented surgeon overseeing 5 major surgeries at the same time, acting as an exec over the computers/robots/whatever that are in fact performing all of the major work themselves.
I mention litigious above because that is
See? (Score:4, Funny)
(The captcha for this post happens to be "lawful". COINCIDENCE?! I think not!)
Oops. (Score:1)
Our robot overlords (Score:2)
Similar to a video game? (Score:3, Funny)
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VNS files - How do you view them? (Score:1)
(they come from dentist office x-rays)
the header looks like this:
00000000 4C 45 41 44 00 00 20 64 00 64 00 00 00 00 00 00 LEADÂÂ dÂdÂÂÂÂÂÂ
Is it a DICOM file? Digital Imaging Communications?
By the way -- Iclone didn't open it.
Video games for Doctors (Score:3, Funny)
Doctor: Dammnit nurse! Guide me over to the Health bonus
Nurse: There's no time Doctor! We're losing the patient.
Doctor: Okay. We have to cheat death. Press up-up-left-left-up-up-down-select.
Nurse: It's working! The patient has full health!
Doctor: Tumour P3wnd!
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Doctor: "Damnit Nurse, I'm a doctor not a script kiddie."
Nurse: "^&*(^#$&*(^^&*(Y&*(#@T&*C(TYC&*#(Y@&#(^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA"
Doctor: "root@localhost"
"surgical" (Score:1)
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Unfortunate title clipping (Score:2)
Typical, summary doesn't explain story propertly.. (Score:1)
Immediately afterwards the doctors ran outside, carjacked an old lady, jumped a ramp and fired an uzi into crowds.
It's not a robot, it's a waldo (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldo_(short_story) [wikipedia.org]
BTW, I read somewhere (and naturally forgot all about it until now) that one of the features being implemented in surgical waldoes is a low-pass filter, which removes any tremor or shaking in the surgeon's hand from the final instrument's movement. Sounds like a win to me.
Wrong section (Score:1)
That's a completely different area of medicine.