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UC Irvine doctors perform West Coast’s first
robotic
surgery on spine
Technology increases precision, enhances healing and improves results
UC Irvine Medical Center’s Dr.
Nitin Bhatia and Dr.
Samuel Bederman have conducted the first
robot-assisted spinal surgery on the West Coast.
They utilized the SpineAssist® to increase the precision of spinal
implant placement in a Los Angeles woman who had undergone two
previous operations, including a spinal fusion in 2007 to treat
a degenerative disk. She had developed another herniated disk
in her lower back
that
caused pain and sciatica. The goal of the SpineAssist procedure – a
spinal fusion performed with screws and grafts – was to alleviate
her discomfort and stabilize the spine.
SpineAssist® is a specially-designed robotic guidance system which
enables surgeons to perform safer and more accurate spine surgeries.
For patients, this means better clinical outcomes with less pain,
fewer complications, and shorter recovery time. SpineAssist has been
in daily
use in leading hospitals with thousands of successful cases worldwide.
SpineAssist
is transforming back surgery by advancing surgical techniques
from freehand method to state-of-the art, guided procedures.
The SpineAssist Robotic Guidance System has 2 key components:
- SpineAssist Workstation - allows surgeons to pre-plan optimal
procedures in 3 dimensions according to the patient’s
individual anatomy, creating a “surgical blueprint”.
- SpineAssist
Robotic Arm - guides the surgeon during surgery to perform
the preoperative plan therefore optimizing clinical
outcome.
The system also lessens radiation exposure for the patient, surgeon
and entire operating-room team. Traditionally, spine surgeons must
take dozens of X-rays during a procedure to ensure that each screw
is properly located and doesn’t impinge on nerves or breach the
spinal canal. Since the robot is programmed based on scans prior to
an operation, the physician can work more quickly, with greater precision
and fewer X-ray fluoroscope images. The UC Irvine Orthopedic Spine
Team has performed more robotic spine surgeries than any other practice
in the western United States.
"This technology can improve outcomes, shorten surgical
times and enhance healing in our spinal surgery patients," said
Bhatia, UC Irvine’s chief of orthopaedic spine surgery. "The
system allows us to preplan an operation using CT scans to precisely
plot the surgery and program the robot to guide screws in exactly
the right spot in the patient's spine."

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