Akron General Medical Center will show off new robotic technology used to treat patients’ hearts during an open house today.
The Akron health system recently opened a Stereotaxis Electrophysiology Lab at its heart and vascular center. It’s one of only four such labs state-wide, the hospital said in a written statement.
With the Stereotaxis Niobi magnetic navigation system, electrophysiologists at Akron General can use a pair of magnets mounted on pivoting arms to manipulate tiny instruments through catheter tubes and into patients’ hearts.
The doctors and their teams work on patients from outside the procedure room, using computer screens and digital automation. This remote work minimizes X-ray exposure for both patient and medical staff, the hospital said.
“This Stereotaxis system is truly state-of-the-art,” says Dr. Robert Schweikert, the hospital’s chief of cardiology, in the statement. “We believe that this system will go a long way to providing safer, more efficient and more successful treatment for our heart patients. It’s truly a medical breakthrough.”
Latest from Today's Medical Developments
- NextDent 300 MultiJet printer delivers a “Coming of Age for Digital Dentistry” at Evolution Dental Solutions
- Get recognized for bringing manufacturing back to North America
- Adaptive Coolant Flow improves energy efficiency
- VOLTAS opens coworking space for medical device manufacturers
- MEMS accelerometer for medical implants, wearables
- The compact, complex capabilities of photochemical etching
- Moticont introduces compact, linear voice coil motor
- Manufacturing technology orders reach record high in December 2025