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Background: Robot-assisted surgery is becoming increasingly common, promising precise and minimally invasive procedures. The absence of tactile senses, however, is a significant disadvantage and may result in complications, including organ damage. A pneumatically driven robot called Saroa™ (Riverfield Inc., Tokyo, Japan) provides the surgeon with haptic force feedback in real-time. In basic experiments, when the haptic force feedback function was on, the forceps used less force than current surgical robots and grabbed much smaller objects. The first human case utilizing Saroa™'s haptic force feedback function for thoracic surgery is presented in this study.
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Ueda et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e61e05b6db6435875b07da — DOI: https://doi.org/10.21037/shc-24-6
Yuichiro Ueda
So Miyahara
Keita Tokuishi
Shanghai Chest
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