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da Vinci Research Kit – Intuitive Surgical

Research lead

Professor Pietro Valdastri

Research team at University of Leeds

Electronics and Electrical Engineering: Steven Freear, James Mclaughlan, Bruno Scaglioni, Alex Attanasio

Mechanical Engineering: Pete Culmer and Ali Alazmani

Computing: Mehmet Dogar

Medicine & Health: Faisal Mushtaq (Psychology), Rebecca Randell (Healthcare), David Jayne (Surgery)

Research support

Intuitive Surgical, Inc.

The University of Leeds received the da Vinci Research Kit as a donation from Intuitive Surgical, a worldwide market leader in robotic surgery. The medical robot worth £1 million will enable us and our collaborators to advance research in the field of robotic surgery.

The da Vinci System is powered by robotic technology that allows the surgeon’s hand movements to be translated into smaller, precise movements of tiny instruments inside the patient’s body. One of the instruments is a 3D laparoscope – a thin tube with optical fibres connected to a stereoscopic camera to provide the surgeon with tridimensional vision. This enables depth perception, augmenting surgeon capabilities during a minimally invasive procedure. The surgeon is 100% in control of the da Vinci System at all times.

Researchers adjust the da Vinci surgical robot.

Another main advantage of the da Vinci robot is the dexterity in controlling minimally invasive instruments, which enables surgeons to perform delicate and complex operations through a few small incisions. da Vinci is powered by robotic technology that allows the surgeon’s hand movements to be scaled, filtered and translated into precise movements of the EndoWrist® instruments working inside the patient’s body. The other key components of the systems include: an ergonomically designed console where the surgeon sits while operating, a patient-side cart where the patient is positioned during surgery, interactive robotic arms, and a 3D HD vision system.

The University of Leeds is the only university in the north of England and outside London to have a da Vinci Surgical Robot to be used for technology-oriented research. The extensive research at the University of Leeds and the funding it brings means that we can invest in the best facilities ran by staff engaged in pioneering research. Our original and innovative research leads the way in many fields, including medical and biological engineering.