The ROSA Robotic Surgical Assistant

The ROSA robotic surgical assistant is a breakthrough tool that makes neurosurgery less invasive, faster and more accurate. Using ROSA helps our surgeons minimize the risk of complications. It also helps your child spend less time in the hospital and get back to normal activities faster.

What is the ROSA Robotic Surgical Assistant?

ROSA™ combines a robotic arm with tools that help plan and guide surgery. The robotic arm is more precise and more stable than the human hand. It can also be guided through small incisions into hard-to-reach areas of the brain.

ROSA’s planning tools enable surgeons to create accurate and safe paths into the brain. Surgeons also use ROSA’s GPS-like mapping system to pinpoint exactly where to make cuts.

Together, the arm and the planning tools make surgeries less invasive – surgical cuts (or incisions) are smaller – and help your child return to their normal life faster. 

What are the side effects of ROSA-assisted surgeries?

Any surgery comes with side effects, including discomfort and pain. With ROSA, the side effects are less common and usually less severe than with open surgery. This is because ROSA-assisted surgeries are more precise and less invasive.  

What are the risks of ROSA-assisted surgeries?

There are always risks with surgery. These risks include infection and damage to tissue around the area that is being operated on. At Children’s Health, we perform more pediatric neurosurgeries than almost any other center. This gives us the experience and expertise to keep surgery risks to an absolute minimum. Using ROSA helps make these risks even smaller, by making surgeries faster and more precise. 

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What type of patient is the ROSA robotic surgical assistant a good option for?

    We use ROSA to assist many different procedures, including:

    • SEEG procedures, which use electrodes to pinpoint the source of seizures in children with epilepsy
    • Deep brain electrode surgeries to place an electrode in a very specific location in the center of the brain
    • Laser surgeries to remove tumors or affect seizures deep in the brain
    • Stereotactic biopsies that demand extreme precision
  • Is robotic surgery better than traditional surgery?

    It depends. Some types of surgery are still best performed using a traditional open surgery approach. Other types can be performed robotically. When surgery is done robotically using ROSA or another robotic instrument, it is often less invasive, faster and has shorter recovery times.