
Orthopedic
surgeon Selen G Parekh used the medium of Google Glass, the tech
giant's wearable computer, to perform a successful foot and ankle
surgery here on Saturday.
A team of doctors
under supervision of US-based Dr Parekh conducted the foot and ankle
surgery wearing Google Glass, which was broadcasted live on Google
website.
The surgery was held during a
three-day annual Indo-US conference attended by a team of experts from
the US, and headed by Dr Ashish Sharma.
Sharma
said Google Glass allows looking at an X-Ray or MRI without taking the
eye off from the patient, and allows a doctor to communicate with a
patient's family or friends during a procedure.
"The
image which the doctor sees through Google Glass will be broadcasted on
the internet. It's an amazing technology. Earlier, during surgeries, to
show something to another doctor, we had to keep moving and the
cameraman had to move as well to take different angles. During this,
there are chances of infection. So, in this technology, the image seen
by the doctor using Google Glass will be seen by everyone throughout the
world," he said.
Doctors said the small
devices, which feature a screen that sits just in front of a user's
right eye, will revolutionize surgery and would teach procedures to
aspiring surgeons without being part of operation team.
The
Google Glass serves as a great advantage as it is easily accessible
through internet and doctors from across the globe could give their
input during the live surgery. This could work wonders in rural areas
where healthcare is not much accessible.
In
September last year, a doctor in Chennai became the first Indian to
perform a surgery wearing the Google Glass as he live streamed an upper
gastro-intestinal laparoscopy procedure on a 45-year-old man to medical
students seated two blocks away.
Google Glass
has a frame similar to the traditional spectacles but is actually a
wearable computer that follows voice commands. It can take photos and
videos to show the viewpoint of the user.
The
gadget is yet to hit the markets. However, Google had distributed at
least 2,000 of the glasses for testing before being made available to
the common man.
Samsung
has been linked to several potential handsets that it may launch at MWC
2014, and now there's more news of a big screened smartphone - although
one unlikely to challenge the Galaxy Note 3.


Dropbox
has said this week that it is making progress in restoring service to
users after the storage site went offline on Friday.