Outpatient Surgery Magazine - Subscribers

Keep Your Nose Clean - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - August 2018

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

Issue link: http://outpatientsurgery.uberflip.com/i/1016846

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 104 of 118

CT scans captured before and during sur- gery can be integrated on big screens to let surgeons work with real-time views of anatomy, even as structures shift due to patient positioning or surgical manipulation. Dr. Ramamoorthy, for example, requested that her team tilt the 3D rendering of Dr. Smarr's colon on the big screen so that it matched the angle she saw through the robotic control console. "One of the challenges moving forward will be how to deal with the potential of information overload," says Dr. Ramamoorthy. While oper- ating on Dr. Smarr, she glanced up at the wall-mounted big screen and took a second to zero in on what she needed to see. "Surgeons now have access to a lot of visual information," she says. "They need to triage that information, digest it and decide what is most important in order to make the best possible decisions. That might require computer-aided, artificially intelligent guidance in the future." OSM A U G U S T 2 0 1 8 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y. N E T • 1 0 5 UC San Diego Health • 3D COLON Surgeons can visualize an internal organ as a three-dimensional recon- struction, as seen in this 3D/MRI overlay of a colon.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Outpatient Surgery Magazine - Subscribers - Keep Your Nose Clean - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - August 2018