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For more information, please contact :
Tom O'Connor, UNMC Public Relations, (402) 559-4690 (402) 650-7063 October 24, 2005 |
UNMC, UNL team up to develop tiny robots that have potential to change the future of surgery
Medical responders of the future may be three inches tall or less.
But, these tiny-wheeled robots – slipped into the abdomen and controlled by surgeons hundreds of kilometers away – may be giants in saving the lives of roadside accident victims and soldiers injured on the battlefield.
Each camera-carrying robot -- the width of a lipstick case -- would illuminate the patient’s abdomen, beam back video images and carry different tools to help surgeons stop internal bleeding by clamping, clotting or cauterizing wounds.
Sound far-fetched? Not for physicians and engineers at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who already are turning the sci-fi idea into reality with a handful of miniature prototypes.
“We want to be the Microsoft leader in this technology and be the state that changes the way surgery is done,” said Shane Farritor, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering in UNL’s College of Engineering and Technology.
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Audio clips Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov comments on: Why he believes these robots will one day replace large incision surgery. How robots use all surgical components, but much smaller scale. Why collaboration between UNMC and UNL was key. Why he believes robots eventually will be better than surgeon’s hands. Dr. Shane Farritor comments on: How the project was selected for military funding to help battlefield casualties. The eventual size of projected robots. |