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Humanoid robots controlled by surgeons did world-first operation on live pigs
Researchers said the teleoperated systems matched established robotic precision while using smaller, cheaper machines that could expand access in underserved areas.
On July 8, 2026, University of California San Diego researchers successfully performed two gallbladder removals on non-primate mammals using teleoperated humanoid robots, marking a world-first preclinical trial reported in the journal Nature.
Unlike traditional surgical robots weighing about 1,800 pounds that require retrofitted operating rooms, the humanoid robots—nicknamed Surgie—weigh only 60 pounds, offering a mobile, cost-effective alternative for diverse clinical settings.
While surgeons achieved surgical precision comparable to established platforms, the study noted technical hurdles including communication latency and multiple recalibrations that extended operating times during the procedures.
"We were surprised at how well Surgie meshed with our workspace and workflow," said Nikita Thareja, a general surgery resident at the UC San Diego School of Medicine.
Michael Yip, a faculty member in the UCSD Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, envisions these humanoid systems eventually functioning as autonomous surgical assistants to address global healthcare staffing shortages.
A humanoid robot successfully performed surgery for the first time, which is considered an important achievement in the field of robotics and healthcare.
(Beijing=Yonhap News) Correspondent Han Jong-gu = U.S. researchers, using a humanoid robot from the Chinese robotics company Unitree (Yushu Technology), conducted a study on live animals...
Humanoid robots performed their first live pig surgery in the world under the remote control of surgeons from the University of California in San Diego.