Robotic technology in orthopedics has been around for years, but with less than striking success. Now Praxim, a French surgical navigation technology company, believes it has solved the technical problems and has an "intelligent instrument" system that surgeons will be eager to adopt. Praxim argues that as OR technology advances, linking imaging, navigation, and computer-assisted intelligent instrumentation, robotic systems will represent not an adjunct technology play, but rather the centerpiece of an orthopedics offering.
by David Cassak
In orthopedic surgery at least, robotic technology has long had a mixed track record. The precision and repeatability of advanced manipulation devices make robots a natural for orthopedics; making the...
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