Remote video management for intraoperative consultation and surgical telepresence.

dc.contributor.authorBoanca, Cosmin
dc.contributor.authorRafiq, Azhar
dc.contributor.authorTamariz, Francisco
dc.contributor.authorLavrentyev, Vladimir
dc.contributor.authorOnisor, Daniel
dc.contributor.authorFlerov, Evgeniy
dc.contributor.authorPopescu, Irinel
dc.contributor.authorMerrell, Ronald C
dc.date.accessioned2020-02-10T17:19:24Z
dc.date.available2020-02-10T17:19:24Z
dc.date.issued2007-11-16
dc.description.abstractTelemedicine applications can connect surgeons from one operating room OR to a distant consultant The additional capacity of telepresence provides remote consultants the ability to control their own view of the surgical field using robotic management of a network camera The goal of this study was to compare access to surgical field by robotic camera versus image controlled by the surgeon using a camera mounted to the table A Stryker laparoscopic camera was attached to the OR table using a Mediflex arm and video image was transmitted with a Polycom Transfer Control Protocol TCP Internet Protocol IP connection A network Sony camera was mounted on a tripod connected over the Internet using a parallel TCP IP connection A Web interface allowed control of the camera angle and zoom In 22 consultations effective bandwidth was 800 Kbps for the network camera and 1024 Kbps for the Stryker camera The operation was thyroidectomy and the consultant was either in Moscow Russia or Bucharest Romania The quality of the image in both methods was indiscernible The ability to identify critical surgical anatomy was also indiscernible No transmission session failed or had an interruption The robotic camera can be a powerful tool for surgical collaboration
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1089/tmj.2006.0081
dc.identifier.urihttps://lib.digitalsquare.io/xmlui/handle/123456789/25700
dc.relation.uriTelemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association
dc.titleRemote video management for intraoperative consultation and surgical telepresence.en
dcterms.abstractTelemedicine applications can connect surgeons from one operating room OR to a distant consultant The additional capacity of telepresence provides remote consultants the ability to control their own view of the surgical field using robotic management of a network camera The goal of this study was to compare access to surgical field by robotic camera versus image controlled by the surgeon using a camera mounted to the table A Stryker laparoscopic camera was attached to the OR table using a Mediflex arm and video image was transmitted with a Polycom Transfer Control Protocol TCP Internet Protocol IP connection A network Sony camera was mounted on a tripod connected over the Internet using a parallel TCP IP connection A Web interface allowed control of the camera angle and zoom In 22 consultations effective bandwidth was 800 Kbps for the network camera and 1024 Kbps for the Stryker camera The operation was thyroidectomy and the consultant was either in Moscow Russia or Bucharest Romania The quality of the image in both methods was indiscernible The ability to identify critical surgical anatomy was also indiscernible No transmission session failed or had an interruption The robotic camera can be a powerful tool for surgical collaboration
dcterms.contributorBoanca, Cosmin
dcterms.contributorRafiq, Azhar
dcterms.contributorTamariz, Francisco
dcterms.contributorLavrentyev, Vladimir
dcterms.contributorOnisor, Daniel
dcterms.contributorFlerov, Evgeniy
dcterms.contributorPopescu, Irinel
dcterms.contributorMerrell, Ronald C
dcterms.identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1089/tmj.2006.0081
dcterms.relationTelemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association
dcterms.titleRemote video management for intraoperative consultation and surgical telepresence.en
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