Science
Related: About this forumRemote surgery performed on a pig 9,000 km away using a game controller
Doctors have successfully operated on a pig from 9,300 km (5,780 miles) away. Using a video game controller, surgeons in Switzerland successfully performed an endoscopy on a pig in Hong Kong, paving the way for remote procedures in humans in areas where local expertise isnt available.
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Now, a joint study between scientists at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) and ETH Zurich has stretched that distance to new lengths. A robotic system and a magnetic endoscope was used at the Hong Kong end, connected through a direct WebSocket protocol for real-time data transfer to a control console in Zurich. The Swiss doctor watched the procedure through a video feed, and input instructions using a video game controller.
This test was conducted in a sedated live pig, with the scientist able to bend the endoscope into a full U-turn and even take a useable biopsy of the animals stomach wall tissue. Despite the distance, latency was kept below 300 milliseconds, which is fast enough for the doctor to respond in near-real-time.
The team says that the success of this experiment shows remote surgeries could soon be done in humans. Robots are already lending surgeons a fine-tuned hand, especially in delicate organs like hearts and eyes. The ultimate goal is to help patients in remote areas, where local experts may not be available to perform such procedures. That might even include operating on astronauts in space.
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https://newatlas.com/medical/remote-surgery-9000-km-game-controller/
RandySF
(70,636 posts)dweller
(25,052 posts)The transgender thing is incredible. Think of it. Your kid goes to school and comes home a few days later with an operation. The school decides whats going to happen with your child, Trump said in remarks to the conservative group Moms for Liberty.
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Sneederbunk
(15,110 posts)JoseBalow
(5,169 posts)hunter
(38,933 posts)There are 8 billion people on this planet, a significant fraction of them having the natural talents required for this sort of work, both the brains and the eye-hand coordination.
Any shortage of capable surgeons is artificial and usually the result of economic disparities, war, and our exploitation of wilderness areas that ought to be left undisturbed.