More robot support surgery
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University in the United States have researched a new robot to help doctors perform surgical operations that they are currently unable to do.
The "solid" robot (Photo: physorg.com, TTO)
This snake-shaped robot will be equipped for future operating rooms and help doctors treat patients more safely and effectively. It has two thin needles with ' tentacles ' that help move freely in 6 degrees.
The robot may also allow surgeons to perform surgical operations in narrow spaces, incision and sutures for more precise and sophisticated incisions.
Another robot, a stable arm, can restrain the surgeons' natural vibrations, allowing them to inject drugs into the tiny blood vessels in the eye, dissolving blood clots that may hurt. sight.
"We do not intend to replace surgeons with automated devices that only want to help them work better," said Professor Russell H. Taylor, who is part of the team that makes robots. on said. In his view, human hands are very magical, but they are also limited. Thus 'a third arm' in this case is quite useful.
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