Surgical Robot Used for First Time to Operate on RVO Patient

 Surgical Robot Used for First Time to Operate on RVO Patient

Surgeons at the University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium are reportedly the first to use a surgical robot to operate on a patient with a retinal vein occlusion (RVO).

Operated by an eye surgeon, the robot reportedly used a needle with a width of barely 0.03 mm to inject a thrombolytic drug into the retinal vein of the patient, successfully dissolving a blood clot.

Researchers at the University Hospitals Leuven and the KU Leuven are reportedly studying retinal vein cannulation (RVC), which requires extreme precision to insert an ultrathin needle into the retinal vein to dissolve the blood clot. For this reason, over the past seven years KU Leuven engineers have been developing a robotic device to provide surgeons with a method of inserting the needle in a precise and stable way, after which the robot can hold the needle perfectly immobile.

The current Phase 1 trial for the robotic device reportedly aims to demonstrate that it is technically feasible to use such a device to insert a microneedle into the retinal vein to dissolve a blood clot. Researchers plan to study the clinical effects of the procedure in a subsequent Phase 2 trial.

Click here to watch a video of the procedure

Click here to read the full press release

Source: KU Leuven

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