tech trend
Tech is a healthcare booster Some of the biggest benefits of technology have come in the areas of precision surgery and e-Health provisioning By Dr Parvez Ahmed
T
echnology has opened up new frontiers in the field of medicine and has brought about a rapid change in the areas of diagnostic imaging, minimally invasive surgical techniques, reconstruction and regeneration. This has ushered in a new era of personalised medicines, attaining the digital frontier of e-Health and research. Diagnostic imaging, with advancement of technology, has shifted from showing anatomical images to functional assessment in situ. For example, fusion of CT MRI images with ultrasound images helps in better characterisation of tumours. The fusion of images makes it possible for much more accurate needle guidance for studying a biopsy specimen. Minimally invasive surgical techniques are of various flavours. These are endo, robotic, hybrid and stereo tactic radio surgery. With endo surgical techniques, surgery has ‘taken the fingers of a surgeon outside the body’ through a one-centimetre key hole inci-
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sion, which reduces hospital stay and hospital cost. Benefits to the patients include quicker recovery and lesser pain. Robotics assisted surgery is reliable and has great opportunity in prostrate, obstetric and gynaecological surgeries. Hybrid surgical techniques combine the best options of intervention techniques and surgery for optimising outcomes. Hybrid Cath Labs and OTs help in the delivery of this fusion. In stereo tactic radio surgery, precisely focused radiation is used for treatment without any incision or general anaesthesia for adults. In effect, it is a surgery without a scalpel and hence the name radio surgery. It can be used for treating both malignant and benign tumours.
Reconstruction and regeneration Reconstruction surgery attempts to restore the anatomy or the function of the body part to normal. This ranges from very simple techniques such as primary closure and dressings to more complex skin grafts, tissue expansion and free flaps. Reconstructive surgery, even
when elected for aesthetic reasons, is usually done to correct an abnormality. With advanced technology support like 3D reconstruction and virtual environment technologies and extensive usage of software integrating laser images with computer tomography scan has brought in an edge to reconstructive surgeries. One of the most pervasive uses of reconstructive surgery is in professional sports in addition to cosmetic surgeries and reconstructive surgeries for oncology patients. Many of these procedures are constantly being improved. Regeneration is a process of creating living, functional tissues to repair or replace tissue or organ function lost due to damage, or congenital defects. This field holds the promise of regenerating damaged tissues and organs in the body by stimulating previously irreparable organs to heal themselves. Regenerative medicine also empowers scientists to grow tissues and organs in the laboratory and safely implant them when the body cannot heal itself. Importantly, regenerative medicine has the potential to solve the problem of the shortage of organs available for