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. 2008 Aug;14(6):539-44.
doi: 10.1089/tmj.2007.0087.

Evaluation of unmanned airborne vehicles and mobile robotic telesurgery in an extreme environment

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Evaluation of unmanned airborne vehicles and mobile robotic telesurgery in an extreme environment

Brett M Harnett et al. Telemed J E Health. 2008 Aug.

Abstract

As unmanned extraction vehicles become a reality in the military theater, opportunities to augment medical operations with telesurgical robotics become more plausible. This project demonstrated an experimental surgical robot using an unmanned airborne vehicle (UAV) as a network topology. Because battlefield operations are dynamic and geographically challenging, the installation of wireless networks is not a feasible option at this point. However, to utilize telesurgical robotics to assist in the urgent medical care of wounded soldiers, a robust, high bandwidth, low latency network is requisite. For the first time, a mobile surgical robotic system was deployed to an austere environment and surgeons were able to remotely operate the systems wirelessly using a UAV. Two University of Cincinnati surgeons were able to remotely drive the University of Washington's RAVEN robot's end effectors. The network topology demonstrated a highly portable, quickly deployable, bandwidth-sufficient and low latency wireless network required for battlefield use.

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