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	<title>knowledgecartel.com&#187; Robotics Archives  &#8211; KnowledgeCartel.com</title>
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		<title>Surgery&#8217;s past, present and robotic future</title>
		<link>http://www.knowledgecartel.com/2009/06/surgerys-past-present-and-robotic-future/</link>
		<comments>http://www.knowledgecartel.com/2009/06/surgerys-past-present-and-robotic-future/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2009 08:49:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>KCartel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Robotics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catherine Mohr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[davinci]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[robotic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Surgery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ted]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The talk about surgical robots is also a talk about surgery. And while I&#8217;ve tried to make my images not too graphic, keep in mind that surgeons have a different relationship with blood than normal people do. Because after all, what a surgeon does to a patient, if it were done without consent, would be [...]]]></description>
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<p><span class="transcriptLink">The talk about surgical robots</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is also a talk about surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And while I&#8217;ve tried to make my images not too graphic,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">keep in mind that surgeons have a different relationship with blood</span> <span class="transcriptLink">than normal people do.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because after all, what a surgeon does to a patient,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">if it were done without consent, </span> <span class="transcriptLink">would be a felony.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgeons are the tailors, the plumbers,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">the carpenters, some would say the butchers</span> <span class="transcriptLink">of the medical world.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Cutting, reshaping, reforming, </span> <span class="transcriptLink">bypassing, fixing.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But you need to talk about surgical instruments</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and the evolution of surgical technology together.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So in order to give you some kind of a perspective</span> <span class="transcriptLink">of where we are right now</span> <span class="transcriptLink">with surgical robots,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and where we&#8217;re going to be going in the future,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">I want to give you a little bit of perspective</span> <span class="transcriptLink">of how we got to this point.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">How we even came to believe </span> <span class="transcriptLink">that surgery was OK,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that this was something that was possible to do,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that this kind of cutting and reforming was OK.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So, a little bit of perspective &#8211;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">about 10,000 years of perspective.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">So this is a trephanated skull.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And trephanation is simply just cutting a hole in the skull.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And many, many hundreds of skulls like this</span> <span class="transcriptLink">have been found in archaeological sites</span> <span class="transcriptLink">all over the world,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">dating back five to 10 thousand years.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Five to 10 thousand years. Now imagine this.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You are a healer in a Stone Age village.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you have some guy that you&#8217;re not quite sure what&#8217;s wrong with him.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Oliver Sacks is going to be born way in the future.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">He&#8217;s got some seizure disorder. And you don&#8217;t understand this.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But you think to yourself,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">&#8220;I&#8217;m not quite sure what&#8217;s wrong with this guy.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But maybe if I cut a hole in his head I can fix it.&#8221;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">(Laughter)</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now that is surgical thinking.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">Now we&#8217;ve got the dawn of interventional surgery here.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">What is astonishing about this is</span> <span class="transcriptLink">even though we don&#8217;t know really how much of this</span> <span class="transcriptLink">was intended to be religious,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">or how much of it was intended to be theraputic,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">what we can tell is that these patients lived.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Judging by the healing on the borders of these holes,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">they lived days, months, years following trephanation.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so what we are seeing is evidence</span> <span class="transcriptLink">of a refined technique,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that was being handed down over thousands and thousands of years,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">all over the world.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">This arose independently at sites everywhere,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that had no communication to one another.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We really are seeing the dawn of interventional surgery.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">Now we can fast forward many thousands of years</span> <span class="transcriptLink">into the Bronze Age and beyond.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we see new refined tools coming out.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But surgeons in these eras are a little bit more conservative</span> <span class="transcriptLink">than their bold, trephanating ancestors.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">These guys confined their surgery</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to fairly superficial injuries.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And surgeons were tradesmen,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">rather than physicians. </span> <span class="transcriptLink">This persisted all the way into and through the Renaissance.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">That may have saved the writers,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But it didn&#8217;t really save the surgeons terribly much.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">They were still a mistrusted lot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgeons still had a bit of a PR problem.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because the landscape was dominated </span> <span class="transcriptLink">by the itinerant barber surgeon.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">These were folks that traveled from village to village, town to town,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">doing surgery sort of as a form of performance art.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because we were in the age before anesthesia. </span> <span class="transcriptLink">And the agony of the patient </span> <span class="transcriptLink">is really as much of the public spectacle</span> <span class="transcriptLink">as the surgery itself.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">One of the most famous of these guys, Frere Jacques,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">shown here doing a lithotomy.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">The removal of the bladder stone,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">one of the most invasive surgeries they did at the time,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">had to take less than two minutes.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You had to have quite a flare for the dramatic,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and be really, really quick.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">And so here you see him doing a lithotomy.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And he is credited with doing over 4,000 of these public surgeries,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">wandering around in Europe.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Which is an astonishing number,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">when you think that surgery must have been a last resort.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">I mean who would put themselves through that?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Until anesthesia, the absence of sensation.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">With the demonstration of the Morton Ether Inhaler </span> <span class="transcriptLink">at the Mass. General in 1847,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">a whole new era of surgery was ushered in.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Anesthesia gave surgeons the freedom to operate. </span> <span class="transcriptLink">Anesthesia gave them the freedom to experiment,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to start to delve deeper into the body.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">This was truly a revolution in surgery.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">But there was a pretty big problem with this.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">After these very long, painstaking operations,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">attempting to cure things they&#8217;d never been able to touch before,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">the patients died.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">They died of massive infection.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgery didn&#8217;t hurt anymore,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">but it killed you pretty quickly.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And infection would continue to claim a majority of surgical patients</span> <span class="transcriptLink">until the next big revolution in surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Which was the aseptic technique.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">Now Joseph Lister was asepis&#8217;s,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">or sterility&#8217;s, biggest advocate,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to a very very skeptical bunch of surgeons.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But eventually they did come around.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">The Mayo brothers came out to visit Lister in Europe.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And they came back to their American clinic and they said</span> <span class="transcriptLink">they had learned it was as important to wash your hands</span> <span class="transcriptLink">before doing surgery</span> <span class="transcriptLink">as it was to wash up afterwards.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Something so simple.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And yet, operative mortality dropped profoundly.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">These surgeries were actually now being effective.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">With the patient insensitive to pain,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and a sterile operating field </span> <span class="transcriptLink">all bets were off, the sky was the limit.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You could now start doing surgery everywhere,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">on the gut, on the liver,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">on the heart, on the brain.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Transplantation: you could take an organ out of one person,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">you could put it in another person, and it would work.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgeons didn&#8217;t have a problem with respectability anymore.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">They had become gods.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">The era of the &#8220;big surgeon, big incision&#8221; had arrived.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But at quite a cost.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because they are saving lives,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">but not necessarily quality of life.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because healthy people don&#8217;t usually need surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And unhealthy people have a very hard time recovering from a cut like that.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">The question had to be asked,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">&#8220;Well, can we do these same surgeries</span> <span class="transcriptLink">but through little incisions?&#8221;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Laparoscopy is doing this kind of surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgery with long instruments, through small incisions.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And it really changed the landscape of surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Some of the tools for this had been around for a hundred years.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But it had only been used as a diagnostic technique</span> <span class="transcriptLink">until the 1980s,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">When there was changes in camera technologies and things like that,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that allowed this to be done for real operations.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So what you see &#8212; this is now the first surgical image &#8211;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">as we&#8217;re coming down the tube, this is a new entry into the body.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">It looks very different from what you&#8217;re expecting surgery to look like.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We bring instruments in,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">from two separate cuts in the side,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and then you can start manipulating tissue.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Within 10 years of the first gallbladder surgeries</span> <span class="transcriptLink">being done laparoscopically,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">a majority of gallbladder surgeries </span> <span class="transcriptLink">were being done laparoscopically.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Truly a pretty big revolution.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">But there were casualties to this revolution.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">These techniques were a lot harder to learn</span> <span class="transcriptLink">than people had anticipated.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">The learning curve was very long.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And during that learning curve the complications went quite a bit higher.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Surgeons had to give up their 3D vision.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">They had to give up their wrists.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">They had to give up intuitive motion in the instruments.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">This surgeon has over 3,000 hours of laparoscopic experience.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now this is a particularly frustrating placement of the needle.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But this is hard.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And one of the reasons why it is so hard</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is because the external ergonomics are terrible.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You&#8217;ve got these long instruments, and you&#8217;re working off your center line.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And the instruments are essentially working backwards.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So what you need to do, to take the capability of your hand,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and put it on the other side of that  small incision,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is you need to put a wrist on that instrument.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so &#8212; I get to talk about robots &#8211;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">the da Vinci robot</span> <span class="transcriptLink">put just that wrist on the other side of that incision.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so here you&#8217;re seeing the operation of this wrist.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And now, in contrast to the laparoscopy,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">you can precisely place the needle in your instruments,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and you can pass it all the way through</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and follow it in a trajectory.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And the reason why this becomes so much easier</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is, you can see on the bottom,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">the hands are making the motions,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and the instruments are following those motions exactly.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now, what you put between those instruments and those hands,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is a large, fairly complicated robot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">The surgeon is sitting at a console,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and controlling the robot with these controllers.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And the robot is moving these instruments around,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and powering them, down inside the body.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You have a 3D camera, so you get a 3D view.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">And since this was introduced in 1999</span> <span class="transcriptLink">a lot of these robots have been out</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and being used for surgical procedures like a prostatectomy.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Which is, a prostate deep in the pelvis,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and it requires fine dissection</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and delicate manipulation</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to be able to get a good surgical outcome.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You can also sew bypass vessels onto a beating heart</span> <span class="transcriptLink">without cracking the chest.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">This is all done in between the ribs.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you can go inside the heart itself</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and repair the valves from the inside.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">You&#8217;ve got these technologies &#8212; thank you &#8211;</span> <span class="transcriptLink"> (Applause) </span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so you might say, &#8220;Wow this is really cool!</span> <span class="transcriptLink">So, smartypants, why isn&#8217;t all surgery being done this way?&#8221;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And there are some reasons, some good reasons.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And cost is one of them.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">I talked about the large, complicated robot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">With all its bells and whistles, one of those robots </span> <span class="transcriptLink">will cost you about as much as a solid gold surgeon.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">More useful than a solid gold surgeon,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">but, still, it&#8217;s a fairly big capital investment.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But once you&#8217;ve got it, your procedure costs do come down.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But there are other barriers.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">So something like a prostatectomy,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">the prostate is small, and it&#8217;s in one spot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you can set your robot up very precisely</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to work in that one spot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so it&#8217;s perfect for something like that.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And in fact if you, or anyone you know,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">had their prostate taken out in the last couple of years,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">chances are it was done with one of these systems.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But if you need to reach more places than just one,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">you need to move the robot.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you need to put some new incisions in there.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you need to re-set it up.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And you need to add some more ports, and more.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And the problem is it gets time consuming, and cumbersome. </span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">And for that reason there are many surgeries</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that just aren&#8217;t being done with the da Vinci.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">So we had to ask the question, &#8220;Well how do we fix that?&#8221;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">What if we could change it so that we didn&#8217;t have to re-set up</span> <span class="transcriptLink">each time we wanted to move somewhere different?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">What if we could bring all the instruments </span> <span class="transcriptLink">in together in one place?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">How would that change the capabilities of the surgeon?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And how would that change the experience for the patient?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now, to do that,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we need to be able to bring a camera,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and instruments, in together through one small tube,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">like that tube you saw in the laparoscopy video.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Or, not so coincidentally, like a tube like this.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So what&#8217;s going to come out of that tube</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is the debut of this new technology,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">this new robot that is going to be able to reach anywhere.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Ready? So here it comes.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">This is the camera, and three instruments.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And as you see it come out,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">in order to actually be able to do anything useful,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">it can&#8217;t all stay clustered up like this.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">It has to be able to come off of the center line</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and then be able to work back toward that center line.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">He&#8217;s a cheeky little devil.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But what this lets you do</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is gives you that all-important traction,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and counter traction,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">so that you can dissect, so that you can sew,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">so that you can do all the things that you need to do,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">all the surgical tasks.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But it&#8217;s all coming in through one incision.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">It&#8217;s not so simple.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But it&#8217;s worth it for the freedom that this gives us</span> <span class="transcriptLink">as we&#8217;re going around.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">For the patient, however,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">it&#8217;s transparent.  This is all they&#8217;re going to see.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">It&#8217;s very exciting to think where we get to go with this.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We get to write the script of the next revolution in surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">As we take these capabilities, and we get to go to the next places,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we get to decide what our new surgeries are going to be.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And I think to really get the rest of the way</span> <span class="transcriptLink">in that revolution,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we need to not just take our hands in in new ways,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we also need to take our eyes in in new ways.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We need to see beyond the surface.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We need to be able to guide what we&#8217;re cutting</span> <span class="transcriptLink">in a much better way.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">This is a cancer surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">One of the problems with this,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">even for surgeons who&#8217;ve been looking at this a lot,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is you can&#8217;t see the cancer,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">especially when it&#8217;s hidden below the surface.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And so what we&#8217;re starting to do</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is we&#8217;re starting to inject specially designed markers</span> <span class="transcriptLink">into the bloodstream that will target the cancer.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">It will go, bind to the cancer.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we can make those markers glow.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we can take special cameras,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and we can look at it.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now we know where we need to cut,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">even when it&#8217;s below the surface.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We can take these markers and we can inject them in a tumor site.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we can follow where they flow out from that tumor site,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">so we can see the first places where that cancer might travel.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We can inject these dyes into the bloodstream,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">so that when we do a new vessel</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and we bypass a blockage on the heart,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we can see if we actually made the connection,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">before we close that patient back up again.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Something that we haven&#8217;t been able to do,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">without radiation, before.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We can light up tumors</span> <span class="transcriptLink">like this kidney tumor</span> <span class="transcriptLink">so that you can exactly see where the boundary is</span> <span class="transcriptLink">between the kidney tumor, and the kidney you want to leave behind.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Or the liver tumor, and the liver you want to leave behind.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">And we don&#8217;t even need to confine ourselves</span> <span class="transcriptLink">to this macro vision.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We have flexible microscopic probes</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that we can bring down into the body.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we can look at cells directly.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">I&#8217;m looking at nerves here. So these are nerves you see, down on the bottom,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and the microscope probe that&#8217;s being held by the robotic hand, up at the top.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">So this is all very prototypey at this point.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">But you care about nerves, if you are a surgical patient.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because they let you keep continence,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">bladder control, and sexual function after surgery.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">All of which is generally fairly important to the patient.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">So, with the combination of these technologies</span> <span class="transcriptLink">we can reach it all, and we can see it all.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">We can heal the disease. </span> <span class="transcriptLink">And we can leave the patient whole and intact</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and functional afterwards.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Now, I&#8217;ve talked about the patient</span> <span class="transcriptLink">as if the patient is, somehow, someone abstract</span> <span class="transcriptLink">outside this room.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And that is not the case.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Many of you, all of you maybe,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">will at some point, or have already, faced a diagnosis of cancer,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">or heart disease, or some organ disfuction</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that&#8217;s going to buy you a date with a surgeon.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And when you get to that point &#8211;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">I mean, these maladies don&#8217;t care</span> <span class="transcriptLink">how many books you&#8217;ve written,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">how many companies you&#8217;ve started,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">that Nobel Prize you have yet to win,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">how much time you planned to spend with your children.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">These maladies come for us all.</span></p>
<p><span class="transcriptLink">And the prospect I&#8217;m offering you, of an easier surgery &#8230;</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is that going to make that diagnosis any less terrifying?</span> <span class="transcriptLink">I&#8217;m not sure I really even want it to.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Because facing your own mortality</span> <span class="transcriptLink">causes a re-evaluation of priorities,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and a realignment of what your goals are in life, unlike anything else.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And I would never want to deprive you of that epiphany. </span> <span class="transcriptLink">What I want instead,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">is for you to be whole, intact,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">and functional enough to go out and save the world,</span> <span class="transcriptLink">after you&#8217;ve decided you need to do it.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">And that is my vision for your future.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">Thank you.</span> <span class="transcriptLink">(Applause)</span></p>
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		<title>DeKa prosthetic arm can wield power tools</title>
		<link>http://www.knowledgecartel.com/2009/05/deka-prosthetic-arm-can-wield-power-tools/</link>
		<comments>http://www.knowledgecartel.com/2009/05/deka-prosthetic-arm-can-wield-power-tools/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jun 2009 01:45:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>KCartel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Robotics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[arm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[army]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dean Kamen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deka]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Next week is VA Research Week, so this week officials from the Veterans Affairs Department were on Capitol Hill talking about past advances in medical technology and showing off some of their newest successes. The most grabbing one – literally – is the new DEKA arm, a cooperative project between the VA and the Defense [...]]]></description>
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<p>Next week is VA Research Week, so this week officials from the Veterans Affairs Department were on Capitol Hill talking about past advances in medical technology and showing off some of their newest successes. The most grabbing one – literally – is the new DEKA arm, a cooperative project between the VA and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.</p>
<p>Advances in arm prosthetics have lagged behind those for legs, which now feature complex processors designed to keep balance and better mimic natural gait. Replicating the complexity of fingers and wrist movement and simple grips requires an exponentially more complex piece of technology.</p>
<p>But the need is growing; VA officials said while in past wars only 3 percent of combat amputees lost part of an arm, in the current conflict it’s more than 22 percent.</p>
<p>The new eight-pound prosthetic features new fittings to better distribute the weight of the arm across an injured veteran&#8217;s body, wireless feeds to more quickly transmit commands to the fingertips, and finer control of the grip. Researchers boast that veterans currently testing the device can pick up a grape without crushing it, shake hands without squeezing too tight, and operate power tools.</p>
<p>“The power tools are always the ones that get them exited,” said researcher Steven Coulter.</p>
<p>Right now the research project only has six disabled veteran participants – the next step for the project is 10 clinical trials, four patient home trials and further testing of the arm’s battery life and motor control. The VA hopes to submit a final product to the Food and Drug Administration for approval by 2011, and start mass production then.</p>
<p>Click on the video below to see the arm in action (controlled by remote in this demonstration) and hear Coulter speak about its features. via <a href="http://blogs.stripes.com/blogs/stripes-central/high-tech-prosthetic-arm-can-weild-power-tools" target="_blank">Stars and strips</a></p>
<p><object width="446" height="326" data="http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /><param name="bgColor" value="#ffffff" /><param name="flashvars" value="vu=http://video.ted.com/talks/embed/DeanKamen_2007-embed_high.flv&amp;su=http://images.ted.com/images/ted/tedindex/embed-posters/DeanKamen-2007.embed_thumbnail.jpg&amp;vw=432&amp;vh=240&amp;ap=0&amp;ti=82" /><param name="src" value="http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf" /><param name="bgcolor" value="#ffffff" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /></object></p>
<p>Dean Kamen showing off the Deka arm at <a href="http://www.ted.com/talks/dean_kamen_previews_a_new_prosthetic_arm.html" target="_blank">TED</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.wildphotographs.com/Galleries/Deka/Luke/web/ArmDesc/index.html" target="_blank">More photos</a></p>
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