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i-Snake 'will transform surgery' | i-Snake 'will transform surgery' |
(5 days later) | |
Experts are developing a flexible surgical robot, known as the i-Snake, which they say could revolutionise keyhole surgery. | Experts are developing a flexible surgical robot, known as the i-Snake, which they say could revolutionise keyhole surgery. |
It could enable surgeons to do complex procedures previously possible only through more invasive techniques. | It could enable surgeons to do complex procedures previously possible only through more invasive techniques. |
A team at Imperial College London has been granted £2.1 million for the work. | A team at Imperial College London has been granted £2.1 million for the work. |
They envisage using the i-Snake - a long tube housing special motors, sensors and imaging tools - for heart bypass surgery. | They envisage using the i-Snake - a long tube housing special motors, sensors and imaging tools - for heart bypass surgery. |
But it could also be used to diagnose problems in the gut and bowel by acting as the surgeon's hands and eyes in hard to reach places inside the body. | But it could also be used to diagnose problems in the gut and bowel by acting as the surgeon's hands and eyes in hard to reach places inside the body. |
The Imperial College team, which includes health minister and surgeon Lord Ara Darzi, will test the device initially in the laboratory before it is used on patients. | The Imperial College team, which includes health minister and surgeon Lord Ara Darzi, will test the device initially in the laboratory before it is used on patients. |
KEYHOLE SURGERY MILESTONES 1900s - Mirrors, lights and lenses attached to endoscopic tubes are used to examine bodies' interiors1930s - Fibre-optics offer an essential light source; endoscopes now thinner and more flexible1970s - Cameras attached to endoscopes mean that surgeons can operate from images on a screen. Lasers developed which can perform surgery Source: Ghislaine Lawrence, Science Museum, London | KEYHOLE SURGERY MILESTONES 1900s - Mirrors, lights and lenses attached to endoscopic tubes are used to examine bodies' interiors1930s - Fibre-optics offer an essential light source; endoscopes now thinner and more flexible1970s - Cameras attached to endoscopes mean that surgeons can operate from images on a screen. Lasers developed which can perform surgery Source: Ghislaine Lawrence, Science Museum, London |
Minimally invasive surgery has obvious advantages - it can mean smaller scars, reduced hospital stays and shorter recovery times. | Minimally invasive surgery has obvious advantages - it can mean smaller scars, reduced hospital stays and shorter recovery times. |
Surgeons are also looking at ways to avoid skin incisions altogether. | Surgeons are also looking at ways to avoid skin incisions altogether. |
One approach is Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery or Notes. This means operating in the peritoneal space through natural orifices or cavities, such as the bowel. | |
Lord Darzi said: "The unrivalled imaging and sensing capabilities coupled with the accessibility and sensitivity of i-Snake will enable more complex diagnostic and therapeutic procedures than are currently possible. | Lord Darzi said: "The unrivalled imaging and sensing capabilities coupled with the accessibility and sensitivity of i-Snake will enable more complex diagnostic and therapeutic procedures than are currently possible. |
"The cost benefits that i-Snake will introduce include earlier, cheaper and less invasive treatment, faster recovery and procedure times and intangible benefits through an increase in patient care and quality of life." | "The cost benefits that i-Snake will introduce include earlier, cheaper and less invasive treatment, faster recovery and procedure times and intangible benefits through an increase in patient care and quality of life." |
Dr Ted Bianco, director of technology transfer at the Wellcome Trust, said: "Gone are the days when the surgeon's knife ruled in the operating theatre. The future of surgery is in smart devices like i-Snake." | Dr Ted Bianco, director of technology transfer at the Wellcome Trust, said: "Gone are the days when the surgeon's knife ruled in the operating theatre. The future of surgery is in smart devices like i-Snake." |
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