Two different medical teams used Apple Vision Pro during two surgeries in the US and UK
He Apple Vision Pro was used during surgery by the team of doctors at London’s Cromwell Hospital, which can potentially “eliminate human error”. Only one team member, a nursing nurse, used the Apple Vision Pro to help prepare, followed the process and chose the appropriate tools
A team from London’s private Cromwell Hospital used Apple’s £2,700 virtual reality glasses to operate on a male patient’s spine as he carried out the operation in augmented reality.
The surgeon, Syed Aftab praised the Apple device pointing out that this allows for better coordination between the different members of the group, giving the impression that they have worked together their whole lives.
Mr Aftab praised the software, saying it had transformed a nurse he had never worked with into someone with ten years of experience. He said the technology would “superpower” his operations team to make them the equivalent of a Formula 1 pit crew.
That same app, created by eXeX, was first used in the United States last month by ndollarsurgeon Dr. Robert Masson, who said it made his team’s work easier. Robert Masson used the Apple virtual reality glasses to operate on a patient’s spine thanks to its augmented reality functions.
eXeX, a leader in artificial intelligence and mixed reality that has improved surgical performance, in collaboration with renowned ndollarsurgeon Dr. Robert Masson, achieved a world first by bringing the Apple Vision Pro to the operating room as logistics and organization tool, improving the organization and workflow of various spinal reconstruction surgeries.
Apple has rightly highlighted the power of Vision Pro in the field of medicine, a device capable of completely revolutionize surgical operations. Apple’s device may become a useful tool in medicine, showing things a doctor’s eye cannot see.