Fortune USA 201901-02

(Chris Devlin) #1

FOCUS


27
FORTUNE.COM// JA N.1 .19

A FEW DAYS BEFOREtugging on surgical
gloves to slice open a patient’s brain,
doctors at Stanford University slip on virtual
reality goggles to help prepare for the risky
procedure. Conventional MRI or CT scans
can reveal only so much about what a patient’s
brain looks like. But feed those images into
VR technology, and surgeons can see the
brain—all the ridges and fissures, lobes and
veins—in 3D, so they can simulate surgery
before stepping into the operating room.
“It’s as if we have been there before, and
it’s not a surprise,” says Gary Steinberg, a
Stanford Medicine neurosurgeon who

TECH


Stanford Medicine’s
Neurosurgical
Simulation Center
is home to a cutting-
edge training
program involving
virtual reality.

VR GETS REAL


IN THE OR
Doctors and medical students are increasingly
using virtual reality to prepare for surgery.
By Andrew Zaleski

PA

UL

SA

KU

MA

—S


TA

NF

OR

D^ S

CH

OO

L^ O

F^ M

ED

IC

IN

E
Free download pdf