FundamentalVR Simulates Soft Tissue With Haptics for Medical Education

Full force feedback, high-fidelity graphics, and 3D spatial technology to facilitate 'pre-human' skills transfer, says company.

FundamentalVR


The Haptic Intelligence Engine enables the Fundamental Surgery platform to simulate soft tissue.
Not only can haptic feedback provide more realistic surgical simulations, but it can also accelerate the process of safely learning new techniques, says Fundamental VR.

Thanks to advances in kinesthetic haptic technology, cadavers in surgical training could be replaced by robotics, augmented reality, and virtual reality. FundamentalVR last week announced additions in its Fundamendal Surgery platform that it said provide “a credible complement and alternative to traditional medical education methods.”

“We are proud to offer industry-leading technology proven to accelerate learning and transform traditional teaching practices into cost-effective, safe methodologies,” stated Richard Vincent, co-founder and CEO of FundamentalVR. “With the addition of advanced soft-tissue sensation capabilities, users are able to make independent decisions about approach and patient interaction and have full high-fidelity control, feeling, and vision as they make that interaction.”

“We have brought a new level of realism to medical education to an extent that the need for surgeons to practice in wet labs on cadavers or patients could be eliminated within just a few years,” he said.

FundamentalVR said it delivers immersive simulations with its Fundamental Surgery platform to help training programs improve consistency and compliance. The multimodal, multi-user platform is designed to enable full rehearsal of medical and surgical procedures, provide deep data insight into competency and skills development, and accelerate safe adoption of products and procedures.

The company, which has offices in London; Parsippany, N.J.; and Boston, said it is the only such platform accredited by leading global educational institutions.

Fundamental Surgery applies haptics

The Fundamental Surgery platform allows users to have the same sights, sounds, feelings, and sensations they would experience in a real operating room, said FundamentalVR. It combines HapticVR technology and analytics of previously unmeasurable data points so that surgeons can acquire advanced techniques.

The company said its Haptic Intelligence Engine delivers full kinesthetic force-feedback haptics into a variety of handheld devices, ranging from base station-held instruments to haptic gloves. It does this within a submillimeter of accuracy, at low cost, and with commercial off-the-shelf hardware, FundamentalVR claimed.

Already deployed prior to the pandemic, the challenges of social distancing and reduction in elective surgeries has fueled a surge in the use of Fundamental Surgery as an alternative to in-person and on-human learning, said the company. It cited the following potential benefits:

  • Scalability: The platform allows expert surgeons to advance skills in highly precise and expert areas without the expense and logistical challenges of traditional wet labs and cadavers.
  • Remote education: The system allows users to perform highly complex procedures fully simulated in virtual reality (VR). This can provide highly scalable global skills-transfer programs for medical device, pharmaceutical, and biopharmaceutical customers globally, said FundamentalVR.
  • Muscle retention: Surgeons can create high-frequency motor skills interactions that build “muscle memory” through the ability to deliberately fail as well as succeed.
  • Accelerated learning: Fundamental Surgery provides measurements for every interaction and decision. Specific metrics include economy of movement, 3D spatial awareness, surgical gaze, respect for tissue, and human factors such as dealing with adverse events and complications.
  • Progressive techniques: VR can replace clinical trials with sophistication, said Fundamental VR. Through simulation, surgeons can test difficult procedures safely before entering the operating room.

FundamentalVR adds capabilities

With full force-feedback kinesthetic haptics, high-fidelity graphics, and 3D spatial technology, the new soft-tissue capabilities allow surgeons to manipulate and feel the texture of anatomy as if they were in the operating room, said FundamentalVR. This enhancement opens the door for accelerated skills acquisition in a wider range of procedures, building capability and confidence ahead of human interaction through “pre-human competence,” according to the company.

The new capabilities are part of FundamentalVR’s five-year technology and clinical journey that has seen its Haptic R&D team work closely with surgeons and educator experts from around the world. The company has drawn from leading universities as well as spatial technology and medical specialists such as Dr. David Farley at the Mayo Clinic.

“The impact of the advanced tissue capabilities are not just skin-deep,” said the company. FundamentalVR said it can now deliver enhanced products for simulations in areas such as spine, orthopedic, and ophthalmology as well as new capabilities in soft-tissue surgery, interventional procedures, and more.

VR programs are often used to help acquire medical knowledge, said the company. With new soft-tissue simulation combined with advanced haptics, surgeons around the world can learn more quickly, it added, building the muscle memory required for proficiency and essential for precise surgical skills transfer.

A short overview of the Fundamental Surgery platform.

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FundamentalVR

The Haptic Intelligence Engine enables the Fundamental Surgery platform to simulate soft tissue.


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