“This was the first time I have ever operated aboard a ship,” said
Dr. Vyramuthu Varanitharan, a general surgeon at Base Hospital Mutur.
“It is very stable and doesn’t move around. It felt as if I was doing
surgery in an operating room in a hospital. It was a fantastic
experience to have been able to do surgery on a hospital ship and it is
something my team and I will never forget.”
Dr. Vyramuthu has revealed this after the U.S. and Sri Lankan surgeons conducting the first ever robot-assisted surgery aboard the USNS Mercy on May 4. The joint team of multinational surgeons and medical professionals successfully completed a cholecystectomy, or gall bladder removal, on a Sri Lankan citizen using a Da Vinci XI Robot Surgical System.
“This landmark surgery advances the boundaries of what is possible through collaboration, skill, and technology,” said U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives Atul Keshap. “We are proud to partner with Sri Lankan medical professionals on this ground-breaking achievement for the international medical field.”
Dr. Vyramuthu has revealed this after the U.S. and Sri Lankan surgeons conducting the first ever robot-assisted surgery aboard the USNS Mercy on May 4. The joint team of multinational surgeons and medical professionals successfully completed a cholecystectomy, or gall bladder removal, on a Sri Lankan citizen using a Da Vinci XI Robot Surgical System.
“This landmark surgery advances the boundaries of what is possible through collaboration, skill, and technology,” said U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives Atul Keshap. “We are proud to partner with Sri Lankan medical professionals on this ground-breaking achievement for the international medical field.”



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