Robot surgeon does suturing better than humans

Autonomous robot can sew soft tissue with accuracy and precision

Image | surgical robot

Caption: the Smart Tissue Autonomous Robot (STAR) (Children's National Health System)

Audio | Quirks and Quarks : Robot Surgeon Does Suturing Better Than Humans - 2016/05/21 - Pt. 1

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A robotic surgical assistant might be in the future as Canadian pediatric surgeon Dr. Peter Kim(external link) and his colleagues have demonstrated an autonomous system that can do a complex suturing task in soft tissue as well as or better than a skilled surgeon.
Dr. Kim, the Vice President of the Sheikh Zayed Institute for Pediatric Surgical Innovation, and Associate Chief of Surgery at Children's National Medical Center Washington DC, and his group "taught" the system using the best practices of human surgeons.
In a proof of principle on pigs they demonstrated the robot could successfully perform a procedure called an "anastomosis" in which the two ends of a surgically severed intestine are sewed together. The robot required minimal direct supervision and the outcomes were at least as good as those expected from human surgeons.
Related Links
- Paper(external link) in Science Translational Medicine
- Children's National Health System release(external link)
- IEEE Spectrum article(external link)
- Scientific American story(external link)
- Wired story(external link)