Advances in artificial intelligence, robotics, augmented and virtual reality in neurosurgery

Neurosurgical practitioners undergo extensive and prolonged training to acquire diverse technical proficiencies, while neurosurgical procedures necessitate a substantial amount of pre-, post-, and intraoperative clinical data acquisition, making decisions, attention, and convalescence. The past deca...

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Published inFrontiers in surgery Vol. 10; p. 1241923
Main Authors Kazemzadeh, Kimia, Akhlaghdoust, Meisam, Zali, Alireza
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 24.08.2023
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Summary:Neurosurgical practitioners undergo extensive and prolonged training to acquire diverse technical proficiencies, while neurosurgical procedures necessitate a substantial amount of pre-, post-, and intraoperative clinical data acquisition, making decisions, attention, and convalescence. The past decade witnessed an appreciable escalation in the significance of artificial intelligence (AI) in neurosurgery. AI holds significant potential in neurosurgery as it supplements the abilities of neurosurgeons to offer optimal interventional and non-interventional care to patients by improving prognostic and diagnostic outcomes in clinical therapy and assisting neurosurgeons in making decisions while surgical interventions to enhance patient outcomes. Other technologies including augmented reality, robotics, and virtual reality can assist and promote neurosurgical methods as well. Moreover, they play a significant role in generating, processing, as well as storing experimental and clinical data. Also, the usage of these technologies in neurosurgery is able to curtail the number of costs linked with surgical care and extend high-quality health care to a wider populace. This narrative review aims to integrate the results of articles that elucidate the role of the aforementioned technologies in neurosurgery.
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Edited by: Mohammad Mofatteh, Queen’s University Belfast, United Kingdom
Reviewed by: Bipin Chaurasia, Neurosurgery Clinic, Nepal Marco Mammi, S. Croce and Carle Cuneo Hospital, Italy Michael Young, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, United States
ISSN:2296-875X
2296-875X
DOI:10.3389/fsurg.2023.1241923