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Surgery is about to change with the introduction of a new MRI-compatible surgical robotic system developed by Dr. Garnette Sutherland at the University of Calgary/Calgary Health Region.
The robotic 'hands' of NeuroArm are rock-steady, and can move in much smaller increments than a human being's hands. Earlier this month, NeuroArm was used to remove a brain tumor from the patient ...
NeuroArm aims to revolutionize neurosurgery and other branches of operative medicine by liberating them from the constraints of the human hand.
Canadian scientists say surgery is about to change with the introduction of the world's first image-guided surgical robot system.
Enter the neuroArm, a robot specially designed to work inside the powerful magnet of an MRI — and guided by the detailed images the MRI creates.
Designed to be controlled by a surgeon from a computer workstation, neuroArm operates in conjunction with real-time MR imaging, providing surgeons unprecedented detail and control, enabling them ...
It may just be NeuroArm, the world’s first magnetic resonance imaging-compatible surgical robot, which represents a notable advancement in the field of robotic manipulation. Performing a surgery ...
The neuroArm is designed to operate on the head of a patient sitting in an MRI machine. A surgeon at a workstation controls the arm using real-time MR imaging as a guide. And the robot’s hand is ...
NeuroArm, one of the most advanced robotic systems ever developed, was designed and built in collaboration with MDA, known for creating Canadarm and Canadarm2.
The promise is that robotic surgeons like the neuroArm can be more accurate than a surgeon's hands, which is vital in areas like brain surgery.
NeuroArm, which is about the size of a dishwasher with two robotic arms, is small enough for one arm to work within the tube of an MRI machine. But the surgeon operates it from a separate room.
NeuroArm, which is about the size of a dishwasher with two robotic arms, is small enough for one arm to work within the tube of an MRI machine. But the surgeon operates it from a separate room.
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