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Versius. The robot for Thoracic surgeons

Our surgical robot was designed to make it easy for you to start using Versius in your thoracic practice

Hear why I chose Versius

Mario Nosotti
Papworth Hospital
Small & modular

Small & modular

The small and modular design of Versius, means you can place your ports exactly where you want them, enabling you to transition from manual laparoscopy to surgical robotics more quickly. Setup can easily be adjusted to suit the procedure or the patient’s anatomy.

Small, fully-wristed instruments

The unique V-wrist technology of Versius is the reason that our instruments are able to have a small diameter, which helps to lower the pressure applied to the intercostal spaces. Because the instruments are articulated and fully-wristed, they provide access to hard-to-reach areas, such as the apex of the lung during upper lobe lobectomy.
Small, fully-wristed instruments
Man using Versius

Collaborative robotics

The surgical team can re-position the arms of Versius during an operation without interrupting the surgeon’s control, meaning it is easy to work alongside Versius at the bedside.

360° Versius wedge resection at Klinikum Chemnitz

Publications

Frances Dixon a,*, Achal Khanna b, Parveen Vitish-Sharma a, Nidhi Shandil Singh c, Kailash Nakade c, Anjana Singh a, Adnan Qureshi b, Richard O’Hara a, Barrie D. Keeler a,d

I‑Hsuan Alan Chen, Ahmed Ghazi, Ashwin Sridhar, Danail Stoyanov, Mark Slack, John D. Kelly, Justin W. Collins

Justin W.Collins, Ahmed Ghazi, Danail Stoyanov, Andrew Hunge, Mark Coleman, Tom Cecil, Anders Ericsson, Mehran Anvari, Yulun Wang, Yanick Beaulieu, Nadine Haram, Ashwin Sridhar, Jacques Marescaux, Michele Diana, Hani J. Marcus, Jeffrey Levy, Prokar Dasgupta, Dimitrios Stefanidis, Martin Martino, Richard Feins, Vipul Patel, Mark Slack, Richard M. Satava, John D. Kelly

Haig, F., Medeiros, A.C.B., Chitty, K. and Slack, M.

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