Remote telepresence surgery : the Canadian experience
Identifieur interne : 000B65 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000B64; suivant : 000B66Remote telepresence surgery : the Canadian experience
Auteurs : M. AnvariSource :
- Surgical endoscopy [ 0930-2794 ] ; 2007.
Descripteurs français
- Pascal (Inist)
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
Abstract
On 28 February 2003, the world's first telerobotic surgical service was established between St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, a teaching hospital affiliated with McMaster University, and North Bay General Hospital, a community hospital 400 km away. The service was designed to provide telerobotic surgery and assistance by expert surgeons to local surgeons in North Bay, and to improve the range and quality of advanced laparoscopic surgeries offered locally. The two surgeons have collaboratively performed 22 remote telepresence surgeries including laparoscopic fundoplications, laparoscopic colon resections, and laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs. This article describes the important lessons learned, including the telecommunication requirements, the impact from lack of haptic feedback, surgeons' adaptation to latency, and ethical and medicolegal issues. This is currently the largest clinical experience with assisted robotic telepresence surgery (ARTS) in the world, and the lessons learned will help guide the future design and development of telesurgical robotic platforms. It also will guide the establishment of telesurgical networks connecting various centers in the world, allowing for rapid and safe dissemination of new surgical techniques.
Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)
Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.
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Format Inist (serveur)
NO : | PASCAL 07-0207060 INIST |
---|---|
ET : | Remote telepresence surgery : the Canadian experience |
AU : | ANVARI (M.) |
AF : | Centre for Minimal Access Surgery, St. Joseph's Healthcare, McMaster University, 50 Charlton Avenue E/Hamilton, ON, L8N 4A6/Canada (1 aut.) |
DT : | Publication en série; Niveau analytique |
SO : | Surgical endoscopy; ISSN 0930-2794; Coden SUREEX; Etats-Unis; Da. 2007; Vol. 21; No. 4; Pp. 537-541; Bibl. 9 ref. |
LA : | Anglais |
EA : | On 28 February 2003, the world's first telerobotic surgical service was established between St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, a teaching hospital affiliated with McMaster University, and North Bay General Hospital, a community hospital 400 km away. The service was designed to provide telerobotic surgery and assistance by expert surgeons to local surgeons in North Bay, and to improve the range and quality of advanced laparoscopic surgeries offered locally. The two surgeons have collaboratively performed 22 remote telepresence surgeries including laparoscopic fundoplications, laparoscopic colon resections, and laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs. This article describes the important lessons learned, including the telecommunication requirements, the impact from lack of haptic feedback, surgeons' adaptation to latency, and ethical and medicolegal issues. This is currently the largest clinical experience with assisted robotic telepresence surgery (ARTS) in the world, and the lessons learned will help guide the future design and development of telesurgical robotic platforms. It also will guide the establishment of telesurgical networks connecting various centers in the world, allowing for rapid and safe dissemination of new surgical techniques. |
CC : | 002B01; 002B24E06; 002B25G02 |
FD : | Hernie inguinale; Chirurgie; Colectomie; Canada; Réseau; Laparoscopie; Médecine; Traitement; Côlon |
FG : | Amérique du Nord; Amérique; Endoscopie; Abdomen pathologie |
ED : | Inguinal hernia; Surgery; Colectomy; Canada; Network; Laparoscopy; Medicine; Treatment; Colon |
EG : | North America; America; Endoscopy; Abdominal disease |
SD : | Hernia inguinal; Cirugía; Colectomía; Canadá; Red; Laparoscopia; Medicina; Tratamiento; Colón |
LO : | INIST-21220.354000147100740080 |
ID : | 07-0207060 |
Links to Exploration step
Pascal:07-0207060Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">On 28 February 2003, the world's first telerobotic surgical service was established between St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, a teaching hospital affiliated with McMaster University, and North Bay General Hospital, a community hospital 400 km away. The service was designed to provide telerobotic surgery and assistance by expert surgeons to local surgeons in North Bay, and to improve the range and quality of advanced laparoscopic surgeries offered locally. The two surgeons have collaboratively performed 22 remote telepresence surgeries including laparoscopic fundoplications, laparoscopic colon resections, and laparoscopic inguinal hernia repairs. This article describes the important lessons learned, including the telecommunication requirements, the impact from lack of haptic feedback, surgeons' adaptation to latency, and ethical and medicolegal issues. This is currently the largest clinical experience with assisted robotic telepresence surgery (ARTS) in the world, and the lessons learned will help guide the future design and development of telesurgical robotic platforms. It also will guide the establishment of telesurgical networks connecting various centers in the world, allowing for rapid and safe dissemination of new surgical techniques.</div>
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