Interventional Systems Launches Micromate™ Subscription
The new subscription service is the first to offer a full-fledged medical robot for percutaneous interventions for an affordable, fixed monthly fee.
The new subscription service is the first to offer a full-fledged medical robot for percutaneous interventions for an affordable, fixed monthly fee.
See how Micromate™ helped the clinical team at St. Antonius Hospital, in the Netherlands, successfully perform a cryoablation of an osteoid osteoma.
Prophecies foreshadowing how robots will replace humans are as old as robots themselves. Could this be what the future holds for medical robots, too? From what we’ve been witnessing, the answer is no.
See how Micromate™ helped the clinical team at Ordensklinikum Linz Barmherzige Schwestern, Austria, perform a Bone Biopsy.
Interventional Systems is proud to announce the signature of a strategic collaboration agreement with the Johns Hopkins University’s Whiting School of Engineering for the development of novel solutions to enhance the accuracy of robotic-assisted percutaneous procedures.
Interventional Systems announced the newest addition to Micromate™’s product suite: a planning and navigation station that will make the needle-based intervention miniature robot available for use with CT scanners.
See how Micromate™ helped the clinical team at Tirol Kliniken, Austria, perform a percutaneous Type II Endoleak Embolization.
The miniature medical intervention robot will bring ease of use and high accuracy to the Chinese operating rooms in a partnership with the innovative Chinese
Read here our input on the most recent guidelines for interventional oncology, and how Micromate™ brings value to this subspecialty.
Learn why building Micromate™ with a user-friendly approach in mind turned it into the most seamless robot to join the Operating Room.
Learn how Micromate™ helped the clinical team at St. Antonius Hospital achieve submillimeter accuracy during a parotid gland biopsy.
Currently, fluoroscopy, Computerized Tomography (CT), and ultrasound are used to support percutaneous needle interventions. However, they have some limitations. Fluoroscopy shows live images of bones
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