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Robotics Medicine Technology

Bringing Surgical Robots Into the Mainsteam 73

The New York Times is running a story about how using robots to perform surgical operations has been transformed from a controversial dream to reality. Dr. Frederic Moll abandoned his residency for Silicon Valley and helped to revolutionize the industry. The lengthy article also discusses some of his innovations. We've discussed various robot-assisted medical procedures in the past. From the Times: "'I was struck by the size of the incision and injury created just to get inside the body,' Dr. Moll says. 'It felt antiquated.' He took the idea to his employer, Guidant, a medical device company. Guidant decided that robotic surgery was too futuristic and too risky, so Dr. Moll rounded up backers, resigned, and in 1995, founded Intuitive Surgical. The company prospered by proving that robots could deftly handle rigid surgical tools like scalpels and sewing needles through small incisions in a patient's skin."
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Bringing Surgical Robots Into the Mainsteam

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  • I bet... (Score:3, Funny)

    by neokushan ( 932374 ) on Sunday May 04, 2008 @01:19PM (#23292808)
    They have detailed files on human anatomy.
    • I'm sure they can never have enough, though. If this were my company, I would make absolutely certain to have all the information on anatomy that I could get, whether in photos or movies. Also, I'd make sure that I reviewed all of the information I can, taking a real hands-on approach. When it comes to things like this, I find that I can never get enough.
      • Re:I bet... (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 04, 2008 @01:45PM (#23293004)
        These machines don't have any knowledge of anatomy.

        They are more like "remote control" surgeons than robot surgeons.

        It's basically laparoscopic surgery taken to a new level of miniaturization.

        analogous to fly-by-wire in planes versus old hydraulic connections.
        • Yeah when one reads of Robotic surgery the picture of an actual robot operating on a person comes to mind.

          If that were the case, I would worry that our future robotic adversaries does, in fact, have detailed knowledge of how we work.

          But for now the borg will have to wait - we are still in control. ...in Soviet Russia, we asimilate BORG!
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by vertinox ( 846076 )
          *sighs* [imdb.com] I think I was the only other person that got his joke.

          John Connor: You know what you're doing?
          The Terminator: I have detailed files on human anatomy.
          Sarah Connor: Makes you a more efficient killer, right?
          The Terminator: Correct.
          • I'm glad SOMEONE did, otherwise I'd be worried about Skynet taking out the human race using little more than the processing power of a speak-and-spell.
            • speak-and-spell. yup. did you just pluck that macguiver-esque scenario from E.T. and use it in a joke?

              nice one! :D
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Hootenanny ( 966459 )
          This is correct. I've been in the OR for open, laparoscopic, and robotic surgeries. The advantages to the robot, versus standard laparoscopy include: 1) The robotic instruments have numerous articulated joints (i.e. wrists) whereas laparoscopic instruments are straight and more unwieldy in some circumstances. 2) The robotic camera is high-definition and stereoscopic, so the surgeon can see everything in three dimensions, adding additional safety beyond laparoscopy.

          The robots are not a panacea - don't
        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by hotfireball ( 948064 )

          These machines don't have any knowledge of anatomy. They are more like "remote control" surgeons than robot surgeons.

          You are about to cut a surface with the sharp tool. Cancel or allow?..

          Allow

          Are you sure? Y/N

          Y

          *shows mouse cursor as a clock*, *HDD works heavily*

          *guh!* Error -0xFF46A1: Unable to connect to socket 0x0650 at address 0xFFFF44DD. [ OK ] [ Retry ] [ Ignore ]

          OK

          *silence*

          *still silence*

          ...

          You are about to cut a surface with the sharp tool. Cancel or allow?..

          Allow

          Are you sure? Y/N

          Y

          *shows mouse cursor as a clock*, *HDD works heavily*

          *guh!* Error -0xD4EE9: Windows Networking not found. [ Configure

    • They have detailed files on human anatomy.

      Its CPU is a neural net processor, a learning computer. The more contact it has with humans, the more it learns.
    • by Hojima ( 1228978 )
      They obviously need detailed files, however for the robotic surgical procedures, I think you might be getting the wrong idea form the article. There is hardly a stress in the autonomous field, these robots are simply assisting with the work. It'll be many decades (perhaps more), until you'll be able to pull up to a vending machine that'll give you heart surgery.
    • by Dan541 ( 1032000 )
      Of course it makes them better at killing...

      I mean um.... Healing
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by maxume ( 22995 )
      There are experiments or ongoing efforts(don't remember which) towards robots that can operate on a beating heart, something a human surgeon simply can't do. So some of the technology is actually additive, rather than simply useful as an emergency backup.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I wonder how far away fully automated surgical systems, the "autodocs" of Larry Niven stories like Crashlander , are.

      I would think that the combination of MRI tech and facial recognition type software could enable robots to see and "understand" the precise physiology of a patient. I don't know how well the triage process or dealing with non-standard problems would work without significant human help. More routine procedures might not be too far away, Lasik surgery is already half way there. I would thin
    • by Hojima ( 1228978 )

      when the local human doctor is dead or incapacitated.
      Or just hammered out of his mind.
  • Bringing Surgical Robots Into the Mainsteam?

    Sure sounds like a promising Anime scenario: robots, surgery, steam.

    Just throw a few pretty high school girls in sailor suits and you have a winner.
  • by Harmonious Botch ( 921977 ) * on Sunday May 04, 2008 @01:34PM (#23292910) Homepage Journal
    I can forsee two possible futures:

    Laws that say that only an MD is allowed to use a surgical robot, and that a manufacturer can sell them only to MDs, and that you can only sell/distribute software for them if you are an MD. This may seem paranoid perhaps, but consider the lawws restricting x-rays: You can buy an x-ray machine for checking welding seams or for x-raying dogs + cats, but you can't use it on humans.

    Or there could be a much looser future, in which anyone can buy one, and anyone can program one. If I were having surgery done by a robot, I'd want one that was running open source software.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by nametaken ( 610866 )

      I think I'd want every last movement checked, approved, monitored, and then rechecked by an MD.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Of course. But at the reliability rate of current proprietary software, I wouldn't want some company saying "It works, we tested it, trust us!"
    • by Have Blue ( 616 ) on Sunday May 04, 2008 @01:56PM (#23293094) Homepage
      Surgery is just about the last place anyone who isn't a trained expert should be involved.
      • by Harmonious Botch ( 921977 ) * on Sunday May 04, 2008 @02:03PM (#23293156) Homepage Journal

        Surgery is just about the last place anyone who isn't a trained expert should be involved.
        It is exactly that athoritarian mindset that concerns me. It should be the patient's decision. It's my body; it should be my choice. ( hmmmm, what does this do to the abortion issue? )
        • by aj50 ( 789101 )
          It is exactly that sort of arrogant mindset that can get you into trouble.

          Here's a tip: If your estranged wife dies unexpectedly and your lawyer advises you not to testify, don't testify.
        • Even if the software driving it is open source, would you be able to identify good code from bad code? (I'm assuming here that you fall under the 99.9% of the population that are not surgeons).

          And no, I'm not talking about the quality of the coding. If a machine is going to start poking around in my body, whether it does what it's supposed to is going to be my overriding concern, not whether I have access to source code that perform functions that I don't understand.
      • by matt me ( 850665 )
        Agree, I'm sure the patient was rather elsewhere.
    • by ljj2y ( 841312 )
      You bring up an interesting point regarding what operating system these things run. I see them in the OR, and the flashing READY reminds me of my old Commodore 64. Strange this thing was originally designed for NASA. Could the software be 80s vintage like the space shuttle?
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If I were having surgery done by a robot, I'd want one that was running open source software.
      You'd go into surgery a guy and then you'd wake up as a girl. This is not a bug but a feature, because after much debate the developers collectively agreed girls are neat.

      Aw heck who am I kidding, we'd all love that.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by piojo ( 995934 )

        If I were having surgery done by a robot, I'd want one that was running open source software.
        You'd go into surgery a guy and then you'd wake up as a girl. This is not a bug but a feature, because after much debate the developers collectively agreed girls are neat.
        I can't help but think this is an oblique reference to Pidgin.
    • by kmahan ( 80459 ) on Sunday May 04, 2008 @02:02PM (#23293148)
      Times are changing.

      An example is the defibrillator. It used to be that only medical professionals were able to purchase/use them. Now there are several such as the Phillips HeartStart that are sold on Amazon. The units are designed so that the average idiot can use them. Slap the pads on the victim's chest, hit the big button, and the unit figures out if the victim needs a shock, and if so gives it. Otherwise it doesn't.
    • Well, I'm not sure those laws are really necessary since anyone who uses one to perform surgeries and isn't certified to actually perform surgeries is practicing medicine without a license, and that's a big no-no (jail and fines and what not).
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I'd especially like it when the OSS gives a seg fault, and the joints jerk into their neutral positions, inadvertantly slicing your abdominal aorta and IVC, causing you to die rapidly of severe internal hemmorage.
    • by NMerriam ( 15122 ) <NMerriam@artboy.org> on Sunday May 04, 2008 @05:20PM (#23294552) Homepage
      The FDA approves all medical devices like automated external defibrillators and surgical robots. It's a long, expensive process that is considerably less fungible than, say, pharmaceutical trials.

      I've worked with a lot of the surgical robots and voice control systems available in the past decade, and they're much more reliable and consistent in manual performance than whatever random surgeon happens to be on call that day. Sure, a doc always has to be driving the thing -- they're nowhere near autonomous (that's still decades away for even simple things), but the point of the robotics is not to remove the expert decision-making of the doctor, it's to eliminate the mechanical aspects of surgery where most things go unpredictably wrong. Just brushing your glove up lightly against the wrong piece of anatomy can cause major internal bleeding, not to mention how difficult it is to precisely control your hands for every split second of a 14-hour long procedure where doctors might have to trade off several times with all sorts of tools still inside the patient.

      The robotics also make an unbeatable teaching tool. The surgeons in 50 years are going to be vastly superior to even the docs we have today, because they'll not only be able to watch from the chief's POV from day one of their residency, they'll be used to rehearsing every procedure in the simulator beforehand and handing off the controls to different specialists elsewhere for a few minutes whenever they need.
    • I'd want the one that does the best job. fuck open source if it's inferior.
  • I've actually gotten a chance to play with a surgical robot once, they are amazing. The particular one I worked with had 2 cameras, and coordinating monitors/eyepieces to view through, so you have the proper depth perception to work with. Truly amazing.
  • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Sunday May 04, 2008 @02:10PM (#23293228)
    These are not robots. These are medical telepresence devices. They have no artificial intelligence or autonomy at all; they are intended to provide the surgeon with tiny hands and eyes in places they could not otherwise reach.

    They are cool machines, but they are not robots.
    • These are not robots. These are medical telepresence devices. They have no artificial intelligence or autonomy at all; they are intended to provide the surgeon with tiny hands and eyes in places they could not otherwise reach. They are cool machines, but they are not robots.

      That sounds good for all of the doctors in India and China and othe relatively poor countries. I'd expect their fees are much lower. When I need surgery, all I have to do is rent the machine, and hire one of them, and make sure that I have a very reliable connection so I can be assured that nothing goes wrong during the operatio..^%^*&(# NO CARRIER...

      • by mbone ( 558574 )
        The 200-300 msec round trip latency between the US and India or China is thought to be fatal to such long distance surgery (no pun intended). However, the US DOD is, I think, interested in short distance telesurgery, say Kuwait to Iraq, which should be technically possible.
  • Oh no (Score:2, Funny)

    Robot surgeons? This is a really bad idea [pbfcomics.com]...
  • Have they taught them how to play a round of golf yet?
  • by Rui del-Negro ( 531098 ) on Sunday May 04, 2008 @02:44PM (#23293504) Homepage
    Welcome to MS Surgery 2008 (c) Microsoft 1983-1992

    > run appendix

    appendix is undefined.

    > run "appendix"

    appendix not found.

    > run "Appendix"

    - Appendix script started...
    - Setup complete.
    - Loading scalpel vector data.
    - Reticulating splines.
    - Blade initialized.
    - Cutting...

    [Message from AutoUpdater: an update for LifeSupport.sys is available and will now be installed.]

    LifeSupport.sys has performed an illegal operation and was terminated.
    Restart? Y/[N]

    > y

    Restart? Y/[N]

    > Y

    LifeSupport.sys failed to start due to error:
    0000 - General error

    Patient has terminated unexpectedly.
  • I took part in a demo of a surgery robot (actually a remote control, not a robot). It was really intuitive! In seconds, I learned how to manipulate all the controls, everything felt very comfortable, I was able to move small rings, and place them over spikes, move and rotate in different directions and angles. It was sweet!

    As for anatomy, anatomy is different from person to person! some people have their heart on the wrong side! some peoples liver is much larger than others (hopefully mine is I drink l

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