Stanford / Entrepreneurship

Future of Robotics in Minimally Invasive Surgery?

By Paul Yock | Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Medicine Lecture 26 of 33

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Lecture Description

Yock discusses the future of minimally invasive robotic surgery. He says it is very exciting and Stanford actually has a lot of expertise in this area.

Course Index

  1. The Accidental Entrepreneur
  2. Biotech Bay: The Other Silicon Valley
  3. Biotech: Interface Between Industry and University
  4. Cardiovascular Disease vs. Bioterrorism
  5. Beginning of Less Invasive Cardiac Techniques: Charles Dotter
  6. History of Balloon Angioplasty Catheter: Thomas Fogarty
  7. Coronary Angioplasty: Andreas Geruntzig
  8. Guidewire Catheter: John Simpson
  9. Mentoring Changed My Life
  10. Testing Medical Devices and Overcoming FDA Hurdles
  11. Restentosis and Stents: Just in Time Design
  12. Using Stents as Drug Delivery System
  13. Opportunity: How to Cover Economic Loss from Stent Use?
  14. Medtech: What's Going on in Region and at Stanford
  15. Interdisciplinary Biomed Education and Clark Center at Stanford
  16. Identify the Need: Invention and Being Contrary
  17. MedTech: Keep it Simple
  18. Patents Dominate MedTech
  19. FDA and Medicare
  20. Think Big and Pay Close Attention to Market Assessment
  21. Envisioning the Future in Medtech: Go Where the Puck Will Be
  22. Who Does Non-surgical Procedures?
  23. Medical Inventions: Physicians and Entrepreneurs in Partnership
  24. How are Financials for Cardiac Surgery?
  25. Cost vs. Price for Medical Stents?
  26. Future of Robotics in Minimally Invasive Surgery?
  27. Attributes of a Successful Entrepreneur in MedTech
  28. What's the Future of Medical Diagnostics?
  29. Who is Leading the Stent Market Today?
  30. Startups: How to Avoid Being Squashed by Big Companies?
  31. Convergence and Drug Delivery
  32. Medical Devices and Nanotechnology
  33. Scaling Technologies to the Developing World
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