An invisible man, eat your heart. In the first, scientists have found a way to see through blood during a process for surgeons, effectively making it transparent.
On Tuesday, Ocutrx Technologies revealed the innovative tool called Hemolyusance. It allegedly uses AI-powered physics to imagine the blood digitally as it was transparent, which should give a clear view of the tissue below when operating the surgeons. Technology is part of a surgical microscope system that the company plans to test in clinical trials earlier this year.
A surgeon present at the Medical Advisor and Seders-Sinai Spine Center and Sinai Orthopedic Center in OCUTRX said, “The ability to present blood, now in the heat of the surgical battle, in the heat of the surgical battle, in the heat of the surgical battle, in the heat of the surgical fight, in the heat,” statement From the company.
Researchers at the R&D Division of Ocutrx, Genius Labs, developed hemolysis. This is the intention of “removing blood opposeless” through advanced computational physics. Researchers will use this physics to understand how light behaves when it passes through blood filled areas. With the information collected from the images of the surgical site at different angles, algorithms then rebuild what these areas should look like under blood, there is a need to worry about sucking or flushing blood without surgeons. In the tests so far, the hemolyusance is capable of imagining areas covered by human blood approximately a quarter inch, although the company hopes that the technique will soon reach half an inch of blood.
“The ability to render blood as transparent is not possible in any area of surgery in advance. No matter whether discipline or scale, bleeding is a regular part of any surgery and can cause many challenges,” Robert Louis, A In a statement by the company, Director of Neurosurgeon and Skull Base and Pituitary Tumor Program at Hong Memorial Hospital, California. “This success helps to remove those challenges and is an important step in making surgery safe and more efficient.”
The company launched Hemoluce in Abu Dhabi Global Health Week 2025 this week. And how it works, a brief video of it can be seen HereBut it will still take some time to expect you to look into the real -world operating room. The technology is a feature of the company’s Ya-Bot 3D surgical microscope system, and clinical trials of the microscope are about to begin this year or next year.
This is not the X-ray vision of Superman, but it is still very impressive for us.