yitit
Home
/
Computing
/
Hololens being adopted as visualization aid for spinal surgery
Hololens being adopted as visualization aid for spinal surgery-February 2024
Feb 12, 2026 9:14 AM

  Matt Smith/Digital TrendsMicrosoft Hololens may still only be in its developmental stage of life, but that doesn’t mean it’s not having an impact. In the case of one orthopaedic surgeon in Santa Catarina, Brazil, it’s helping him perform life-altering spinal surgery in a safe and affordable manner.

  Spinal surgery is, to say the least, complicated and delicate surgery, which is why 3D scans of a patient’s spine are often taken and visualized — in this case, so that the Dr. Henrique Lampert could select the perfect position for screws designed to fuse vertebrae together. However the imaging of such a model is difficult, because intra-operative CT scanning isn’t cheap and is only available in a few locations.

  Recommended Videos

  Warning: Contains graphics video of spinal surgery:

  Holographic Assisted Spine Surgery with Hololens

  Hololens however is entirely portable and, at $3,000 per headset, is much more affordable than other medical alternatives. So that’s what Dr. Lampert and his development partner, Dr Gobatto (thanks Reality.News) used, and by all accounts, it works very well as an alternative.

  Related

  You won’t be taking Microsoft’s HoloLens 3 into the metaverse Microsoft unveils Mesh, and with James Cameron, dives into mixed reality HoloLens 2 will have dark mode, 5G support when it launches globally this fall

  Of course there are reasons that the Hololens is far cheaper. Currently its rendering power and level of detail aren’t perfect, with both doctors hoping that future versions will allow for greater resolution renders to be visualized within its augmented reality view. Surprising though, the doctors reportedly love the limited field of view currently offered by the Hololens, as it left traditional monitors unobstructed by digital elements.

  They did say however that the headsets could do with additional processing power, so that the frame rate doesn’t suffer so much when complex 3D models are loaded into the augmented view.

  Moving forward, the doctors will be authoring a medical article to evaluate just how effective the technique is compared to more traditional medical hardware, and what kind of difference it can make to patients. They also hope to create a new course for surgeons to help them learn how best to use holographic technology in the operating theater.

Comments
Welcome to yitit comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Login to display more comments
Computing
Recent News
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.yitit.com All Rights Reserved